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Writers @ Stanton
122 Episodes
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Celebrate the 100th issue of the Quarterly Essay with award-winning columnist Sean Kelly as he gives a definitive account of Albanese’s political style of moderation and shows what lies behind it, and whether Labor is still up for the good fight.
Discover the life of Gough Whitlam in this analysis of his achievements and failures. Drawing on newly discovered archives and interviews, Bramston offers new insights into the upbringing, ascension, and leadership of Australia’s 21st prime minister.
Discover this new version of our national story from one of Australia’s leading historian. This is a modern Australia permeated by First Nations history, and a thriving nation-state still to realise its political independence.
Delve into the secrets that lie behind Australia’s success as the ‘Lucky Country’ and why its relative prosperity and good living is not just luck. Hear Andrew share his analysis of how the unique Australian Way works and why it matters.
Discover this timely debut from Clare Stephens, joined in-conversation by He Would Never author, Holly Wainwright. The Worst Thing I’ve Ever Done explores cancel culture, and holds a mirror to the relationship people have to online personalities.
From Ned Kelly Award-winning author comes the next mystery in the Paul Hirschhausen series. With tensions high in the outback town of Tiverton, can Paul find the answers of a missing person’s case before the town reaches breaking point?
Join Duncan McNab as he expertly explains the poisonous truth behind the mushroom murder trial, from the sequence of events that left three people dead, a community and family shattered and brought Erin Patterson to stand trial.
Music industry legend Stuart Coupe shares the story of the original King of the Cross, Abe Saffron, who laid the foundations for more than fifty years of intrigue, murder and mayhem to become one of the most feared and most powerful men in Australia.
Join award-winning Australian crime writer Chris Hammer in this newest Scrubland instalment. This is journalist Martin Scarsden’s most perilous assignment yet – instead of the hunter, he finds himself the hunted into the outback.
Undertaken with the co-operation of descendants of the last men to be outlawed in Australia on the cusp of nationhood in the winter of 1900, The Last Outlaws offers a new understanding of both our past and our present.
Discover why Australia’s fossil-fuel giant Woodside is doubling down on gas production in this new Quarterly Essay with Marian Wilkinson. How convincing is their argument that gas is a necessary transition fuel, as the world decarbonises?
Join this award-winning author as he discusses his newest thriller, where the two worlds of Police Constable Philomena McCarthy collide. Trapped in the middle of a vicious gang war, she has to decide who to trust - the badge or her own blood?
Discover seven stories of men who served from WWI to Korea, and their wartime achievements in the air. Based on personal interviews, Burgess captures the exploits of these extraordinary men who took to the skies in extraordinary times.
Join award-winning Australian journalist Mike Amor as he discusses his career and what motivates journalists to do what they do. Why do they, sometimes recklessly, expose themselves to danger when they have family at home?
Rod Halsted takes you on a wild ride through his life: addiction, crime, and redemption, all wrapped in the irreverent humour of a true Aussie larrikin. Take My Advice, I’m Not Using It! is as much a confession as it is a celebration of resilience.
From the bestselling author of At the Foot of the Cherry Tree comes another stunning tale of secrets and betrayal in the aftermath of war that asks: what happens when you let the truth get in the way of a good story?
From the streets of Hong Kong to Beijing’s shadowy halls of power and the backstabbing workings of Parliament House in Canberra, discover this debut international thriller set in the last 24 hours of the world as we know it.
Learn the dramatic story of trade between Imperial China and the West and how it changed the world, with clear implications for the future. Pembroke illuminates the reasons China distrusts the West and why that view is unlikely to change soon.
In an era of rising danger for all, and dramatic choices for Australia, Hugh White explores how the world is changing and Australia should respond. This essential essay urges us to make our way in a hard new world with realism and confidence.
Expert Linda Jaivin joins us with this riveting account of the Chinese Cultural Revolution under Mao Zedong, focusing on its eventful start and shedding light on the ideological quarrels that underpinned it and the personalities involved.























