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Steph Harmon

Steph Harmon is culture editor of Guardian Australia. Twitter @stephharmon. Email steph.harmon@theguardian.com

September 2024

  • ‘I knew somebody who had a tiny dog and they accidentally sat on it’ … St Vincent.

    10 Chaotic Questions
    St Vincent: ‘My most cringeworthy celebrity run-in? I’m sweating right now telling you about it’

    The musician talks ghosts, giraffes, and the time she met her favourite actor – with disastrous consequences
  • Our favourite celebrity apologies (or non-apologies): Colleen Ballinger AKA Miranda Sings, Lena Dunham, Dave Grohl, Drew Barrymore and Ariana Grande.

    ‘An absolute art form’: the best, worst and weirdest celebrity apologies

    In the wake of Dave Grohl’s public confession that he fathered a child outside of his marriage, Guardian staff choose their favourite mea culpas, from Lena Dunham to Fyre festival. Tell us your pick in the comments below
    • 10 Chaotic Questions
      Ben Lee: ‘My whole career is chasing the dragon of opening for Sonic Youth’

    • Bookmark this
      ‘Destined to be a classic’: the best Australian books out in September

    • 10 Chaotic Questions
      Mark Manson: ‘My industry is rife with hucksters, charlatans, fake gurus. It drives me crazy’

August 2024

  • Celia Pacquola

    10 Chaotic Questions
    Celia Pacquola: ‘Do I have a party trick? I used to be able to cry on cue’

    The writer-comedian shares her celebrity lookalikes, the strangest thing in her fridge and her controversial opinion about croissants
  • Simon Armitage

    10 Chaotic Questions
    Simon Armitage: ‘You’re not going to get me to say anything bad about any bird’

    As part of Australian Poetry Month, the UK’s poet laureate shares his least favourite word and his most controversial pop culture opinion
  • Books of the month composite Australia.

    Bookmark this
    New Andy Griffiths, Korean slow food and a frontier war epic: the best Australian books out in August

    Each month Guardian Australia editors and critics pick the upcoming titles they have already devoured – or can’t wait to get their hands on

July 2024

  • July Book Review

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    ‘Radical’, ‘a headrush’, ‘insanely clever’: the best Australian books out in July

    Each month Guardian Australia editors and critics pick the upcoming titles they have already devoured – or can’t wait to get their hands on

May 2024

  • Best books column composite. From left to right: 12 Rules for Strife by Jeff Sparrow and Sam Wallman, Ghost Cities by Siang Lu, Ela! Ela! by Ella Mittas, Only the Astronauts by Ceridwen Dovey, A Very Secret Trade by Cassandra Pybus, Peripathetic by Cher Tan, Safe Haven by Shankari Chandran and All the Beautiful Things you Love by Jonathan Seidler.

    Bookmark this
    ‘My favourite book of the year so far’: the best Australian books out in May

    Each month Guardian Australia editors and critics pick the upcoming titles they have already devoured – or can’t wait to get their hands on

April 2024

  • A satellite image shows rain over NSW on Friday 5 April

    Australia news live
    Heavy rain continues in NSW; SA police head to Alice Springs for backup – as it happened

  • March Book Column for Aus Culture Desk

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    ‘Candid’, ‘remarkable’, ‘beguiling’: the best Australian books out in April

March 2024

  • the Facebook ad from Queensland Symphony Orchestra.

    ‘The worst AI-generated artwork we’ve seen’: Queensland Symphony Orchestra’s Facebook ad fail

  • Zaachariaha Fielding and Michael Ross of Electric Fields.

    ‘We are buzzed with euphoria’: Electric Fields to represent Australia at Eurovision

  • Bookmark This! Composite featuring (L-R) One Another by Gail Jones, The Silver River by Jim Moginie, Beatrix Bakes: Another Slice by Natalie Paull, Lead Us Not by Abbey Lay, Appreciation by Liam Pieper, Servo by David Goodwin, Loving my Lying, Dying, Cheating Husband by Kerstin Pilz, The Cancer Finishing School by Peter Goldsworthy, Thanks For Having Me by Emma Darragh, Always Will Be by Mykaela Saunders, 36 Ways of Writing a Vietnamese Poem by Nam Le

    Bookmark this
    ‘Bold’, ‘extremely fun’, ‘luminously written’: the best Australian books out in March

  • US clown Geoff Sobelle invited the audience around his table for his performance work Food.

    The rise of ‘theatre AND’: how sounds, smells and interaction are luring in audiences

February 2024

  • Invisible Opera at Perth festival 2024

    Perth festival 2024: a voyeuristic work where the public becomes the show – but not all are in on the joke

  • American singer songwriter Taylor Swift performing during the first night of the The Eras Tour in Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground MCG, Melbourne, Friday, February 16, 2024. Taylor Swift's Eras Tour has descended on Melbourne, with the pop megastar expected to perform in front of the biggest crowds of her career so far. (AAP Image/Joel Carrett) NO ARCHIVING, EDITORIAL USE ONLY, NO COMMERCIAL USE, NO PUBLICATION COVERS

    Taylor Swift Eras tour Melbourne concert: relive the pop star’s biggest ever show – as it happened

  • Beyoncé and Jay-Z sitting at a table. Beyoncé is wearing a white cowboy hat

    Beyoncé announces Act II of Renaissance at the Super Bowl and releases two singles

  • Composite of book covers: All the Words We Know by Bruce Nash, Ho Jiak by Junda Khoo, The Next Big Thing by James Colley, Politica by Yumna Kassab, We All Lived In Bondi Then, a posthumous collection by Georgia Blain, Monument by Bonny Cassidy, My Brilliant Sister by Amy Brown, The Great Undoing by Sharlene Allsopp and The Pulling by Adele Dumont

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    ‘Poetic’, ‘fearless’, ‘a creative triumph’: the best Australian books out in February

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