CATEGORIES
Kategorien
Let's twist again
Waiting for an announcement about who gets what in our new government is enough to send anyone around the bend.
Tinseltown no more
The heat is relentless, the traffic daunting and the homelessness distressingly in your face. It could almost be Auckland.
Connecting people
Anne Salmond has been a bridge between cultures all her life. Her new book revisits the stepping stones in her journey.
Flying the coop
It's the Friday afternoon before the second-to-last Saturday Morning with Kim Hill. It's also two days after Hill has become a grandmother for a second time.
Warming the cockles
I am in mourning, and also in a rage. About pastry. Edmonds has announced it will no longer produce pastry. This is amazingly rude. I have been using its butter puff pastry forever. It has to be butter pastry. You cannot make pastry with nasty margarine.
GoPro to war
Live streaming has added a new dimension to coverage of conflict, but the first casualty in war remains truth.
The name game
Just because it says psychologist on your business card doesn't mean you can go around giving out advice.
Fruit versus flavour
That plump, juicy-looking image displayed on the front of labels could be leading you astray if the product is, in fact, fruitless.
Give it a bash
A little spiral spring thing' makes the ACO's instrument line-up.
Flipping the script
The new Fargo may echo the original film but it's also a product of the Trump era.
Who's behind bars
Two top British prison dramas return for another lag.
Starting afresh
New releases from Mermaidens and Grayson Gilmour impress.
A bigger bang
The War on Drugs keeps growing in size and audience appeal.
Going to town
Our biggest arts festivals have announced their line-ups for 2024. The events' creative directors talk about how they've put their own stamp on their programmes and life after Covid.
Future imperfect
The Power author delivers busy, confusing, fun read.
Believe in the wolves
Uneven but highly readable novel ponders the randomness of life.
Hail to the chiefs
Historian Mary Beard draws on ancient sources and educated guesswork to define what it took to be a Caesar.
On the run
Health and environmental concerns spell curtains for some waterproof mascara and other cosmetics.
Bird's-eye view
Booker longlisted Anna Smaill’s second novel explores the gaps between the reality we build for ourselves and who we really are.
In from the cold
It is 34 years since the Berlin Wall fell. For Dunedin author Philip Temple, going behind the Iron Curtain was like entering a time warp.
Supplementary evidence
Kiwis are spending a fortune on supplements with little to go on and new rules allowing manufacturers to make evidence-based claims are at least three years away.
Poetic rage
Tusiata Avia’s new collection responds to the furore her award-winning last work belatedly ignited.
Playing the blame game
As various countries around the world go into Covid-management inquiry mode, it's worth remembering the useful things we learned from the crisis admittedly, most of them in the \"what not to do\" category.
Centre of rejection
The blessed suspension of political chatter ended the other day. For three weeks, the country appeared to run itself, no policy was enacted and even the factory that churns out Act Party press releases went quiet. I am willing to lay odds that a poll of New Zealanders would find we were quite keen on this state of affairs. Polling itself had also been retired, of course, and we liked that, too.
Watch and learn
Moree is a farming town on the black-soil plains 630km northwest of Sydney with an ugly past and an elegant presence in the weary struggle to reconcile Aboriginal and white Australia.
The ménage à trois
Expect a clenched-teeth consummation as two leaders with an acrimonious history attempt to be civil to each other, and the PM-elect plays Cupid.
The accent's off migrants
Kiwi English is a different linguistic beast and many new arrivals struggle to understand it.
Be afraid, very afraid
British historian explores how much fear has been - and will continue to be - a fundamental driver in society.
Hope for the best
Celebrated author continues her exploration of loneliness and loss in a novel set in pandemic times.
Ruling the roost
We have a new game at Lush Places. It's called Find the Egg. It takes two people and three chickens, and this is how you play: The game begins when one of your chickens - your lazy, greedy, crap-everywhere chicken - starts singing her \"I've laid a lovely egg!\" song. She will do this very loudly, so loudly you should expect noise complaints from neighbours.