logo
Without pregnancy cravings, the Dubai chocolate bar wouldn't have been born

Without pregnancy cravings, the Dubai chocolate bar wouldn't have been born

The Age23-05-2025
We fell in love with Sayaka Murata's Convenience Store Woman – the story of Keiko Furukura, a woman in her late 30s who has worked at the same Tokyo store for 18 years – when it was published in English in 2018. In her new novel, Vanishing World (Granta, translated by Ginny Tapley Takemori; $30), Murata continues to push boundaries – cultural, narrative and those of her readers. Set in a dystopian Japan where all children are conceived via artificial insemination and sex between married couples is taboo, the story follows Amane as she navigates a society ruled by rigid norms around reproduction and relationships. Fair warning: this novel isn't for the faint-hearted. It's strange, and not as immediately approachable as Convenience Store Woman. But the weirdness serves a purpose – forcing us to question the legitimacy of social structures, and why some vanish while others remain. Melanie Kembrey
WEAR / Slide show
My first thought on beholding a freshly unboxed pair of Gen-FF Buckle 2 Bar shearling leather slides ($220) was, 'Cute, but how do you wear them?' (Answer: with a wide pant, ideally, and possibly a tonal ankle sock.) My second, a few seconds after placing my tired trotters inside them, was, 'If every shoe had a shearling foot-bed, no one would ever wear anything else.' And so it has come to pass; off-duty, I'm now wearing them with everything. These newcomers feel every bit as magical as they look, and it's not just about the shearling: designed by FitFlop, in consultation with Calgary's Human Performance Lab, their raison d'être is to bestow serious comfort by way of cutting-edge biomechanics. This is probably why they have a little bit of a wedge, too, because wedges make everything comfier. All of which is to say, a slide in midwinter? Hell, yes. In Chocolate Brown or Stone Beige. Sharon Bradley
LISTEN / Teen dream
When she was a teenager, Shima Oliaee was a contestant in America's Junior Miss pageant. Renamed Distinguished Young Women, it's an annual competition held in Mobile, Alabama, where 50 high-school girls – the best and brightest from each US state – compete to win a $US40,000 ($62,000) scholarship. Two decades later, Oliaee, who's now a journalist, returns as a judge. Her podcast, The Competition, is both a fly-on-the-wall look at the intense pressure-cooker nature of the two-week competition – which includes scholastics, fitness, talent and public speaking – and a reflective journey for Oliaee as she looks at who she was then and who she is now. With Roe v Wade being overturned mid-competition, it also trains a spotlight on what it means to be a young woman in America today. Barry Divola
SHOP / Snap chat
The Polaroid Flip is a retro-cool, instant film camera packed with sharp smarts and serious style (polaroid.com; $399). Under the flippable lid? Four automatic lenses, sonar autofocus (yep, it uses sound waves to measure the distance between camera and subject) and Polaroid's brightest flash yet. It even lets you know when your shot's overexposed. Pair it with the app for double exposures, timers and manual controls – or just point, shoot and let the magic happen. Compatible with i-Type and 600 film and USB-C-rechargeable, the Flip is built for capturing real life in bold, beautifully imperfect prints. Frances Mocnik
WATCH / Friends in high places
Some watch the Sex and the City sequel And Just Like That … for the fashion, the friendship and the fellas, but what you should really be keeping an eye on is the real estate. While Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker, below with Kristin Davis and Cynthia Nixon) and co will always have my heart, season three promises a big change: Carrie is no longer a West Village girl. Yep, she's swapped her one-bed, brownstone apartment with its magical closet for a $US5 million ($7.7 million), four-bed townhouse in Gramercy Park in the heart of Manhattan – a 30-odd-minute walk away (longer in Louboutins). Timing is everything. New York Magazine has lamented the takeover of Carrie's old, once-Bohemian enclave by 'West Village girls', who dress the same, only drink three cocktails a night and spend their time working out. There goes the neighbourhood and there goes our girl – forever ahead of the curve. On Max from May 30. Louise Rugendyke
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

It's 2am and Nick Kyrgios wants to kick on. Welcome to Wimbledon Village
It's 2am and Nick Kyrgios wants to kick on. Welcome to Wimbledon Village

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

It's 2am and Nick Kyrgios wants to kick on. Welcome to Wimbledon Village

No nightspot in Wimbledon Village stays open later than Hemingways Bar. But with the 2am closing time rapidly approaching on Wednesday night, Nick Kyrgios wanted to kick on. The 2022 Wimbledon runner-up, a big basketball fan, knew NBA guard Jordan Clarkson – who was at the award-winning cocktail bar on Monday to celebrate his free agency commitment to the New York Knicks – was in London to watch the tennis. Kyrgios dialled Clarkson's number and told the ex-Utah Jazz sharpshooter to meet him outside Hemingways. Soon enough, an Uber rolled up, and they were off to party in east London. Welcome to just another night in the usually 'sleepy' Wimbledon Village, which springs to life with tourists and sports stars during the Wimbledon tennis fortnight. There is nothing like it at any of the other three grand slams. The village is located at the top of the hill near Wimbledon Common and a natural extension of the grasscourt major, with a traditional English vibe and lively dining and bar scene, including the famous Dog and Fox hotel (of which Kyrgios is a regular). There is also an annual competition where village businesses go head-to-head to design the best and most creative tennis-themed window decoration, with centre court tickets to semi-finals day up for grabs.

It's 2am and Nick Kyrgios wants to kick on. Welcome to Wimbledon Village
It's 2am and Nick Kyrgios wants to kick on. Welcome to Wimbledon Village

The Age

time2 hours ago

  • The Age

It's 2am and Nick Kyrgios wants to kick on. Welcome to Wimbledon Village

No nightspot in Wimbledon Village stays open later than Hemingways Bar. But with the 2am closing time rapidly approaching on Wednesday night, Nick Kyrgios wanted to kick on. The 2022 Wimbledon runner-up, a big basketball fan, knew NBA guard Jordan Clarkson – who was at the award-winning cocktail bar on Monday to celebrate his free agency commitment to the New York Knicks – was in London to watch the tennis. Kyrgios dialled Clarkson's number and told the ex-Utah Jazz sharpshooter to meet him outside Hemingways. Soon enough, an Uber rolled up, and they were off to party in east London. Welcome to just another night in the usually 'sleepy' Wimbledon Village, which springs to life with tourists and sports stars during the Wimbledon tennis fortnight. There is nothing like it at any of the other three grand slams. The village is located at the top of the hill near Wimbledon Common and a natural extension of the grasscourt major, with a traditional English vibe and lively dining and bar scene, including the famous Dog and Fox hotel (of which Kyrgios is a regular). There is also an annual competition where village businesses go head-to-head to design the best and most creative tennis-themed window decoration, with centre court tickets to semi-finals day up for grabs.

11 fun things to do in Melbourne
11 fun things to do in Melbourne

The Age

time2 days ago

  • The Age

11 fun things to do in Melbourne

Experience the Cuphead zoetrope at ACMI ACMI's permanent The Story of the Moving Image exhibition contains little-known delights that will excite the animation enthusiasts and gamers among us. Such as a zoetrope, the pre-film animation device that produces the illusion of motion by displaying a sequence of drawings or photographs. One such device has been designed by Studio MDHR, specially for ACMI, to produce the illusion of 90 characters from the Cuphead video game magically coming to life. Inspired by surrealist cartoons of the 1930s, the 2017 video game – one of the most successful run-and-gun video games in recent memory – is playfully evoked through this contemporary incarnation of the popular 19th-century invention. Walk along the Solar System Trail One of the lesser-known attractions of St Kilda is the Solar System Trail, a walking trail that's a scaled replica of our solar system. The 1,392,000-kilometre diameter of the sun is rendered into 139 centimetres, so each millimetre you walk represents 1000 kilometres and Port Phillip Bay's crescent shape means the sun can be viewed from every one of the nine model locations. Start with the 'sun' in Marina Reserve, walk the short distance to the first five planets – Earth is only 150 metres from the sun – and end in Port Melbourne with dwarf planet Pluto, 5.9 kilometres from where you initially started. In essence, you've travelled 5.9 billion kilometres. Belt your heart out at Kono Coin Karaoke Diverge from Melbourne's archetypal private karaoke rooms and open mic nights and exercise your lungs at Melbourne's first coin-operated karaoke destination, Kono Coin Karaoke. Loading Disco-lit booths that come equipped with two microphones each, fun props and a range of songs in English, Korean, Chinese and Japanese are spread across two floors, with the option to sing on a public stage if that's your preference. You pay by song – $2 for one or $20 for 12. Experience letterbox-sized art at Mailbox Art Space Avail yourself of the wonders of Melbourne's smallest artist-run space, nestled in the art deco-tiled foyer of the refurbished Pawson House on Flinders Lane. Nineteen restored glass-fronted letterboxes play host to an ever-changing display of paintings, sculptures, jewellery and illustrations that respond to a particular theme at any given time. The current exhibition is Indonesian-born, Melbourne-based visual artist Badra Aji's No More Dreaming Tonight, which navigates the charged terrain of race, sex and power through a fragmented yet intimate narrative. Visit the National Communication Museum Housed in a 1939 telephone exchange building, the new National Communication Museum in Hawthorn showcases integral technologies from the past alongside cutting-edge technologies that will connect us into the future. Step into the retro Cyber Cafe for an immersive experience narrated by Rita Arrigo, one of the pioneers behind Australia's first internet cafe, Netcafe, which opened in St Kilda in 1995. Meander into the Conversations Gallery and find yourself interacting with Samoan dance using hand-tracking technology, tapping out Morse code in a Guitar Hero -style game or getting close to iconic innovations such as the first computer mouse. See a wall of oscilloscopes come to life as you watch a vintage horror film made in the Telecom Research Labs, or pick up a rotary phone, dial the number and watch your call work its way through a real, functional Strowger step-by-step telephone exchange. The museum has two floors for other interactive exhibits. Become part of the art at ArtVo How you feel about ArtVo will hinge on how you feel about traditional art galleries and museums, where one isn't allowed to touch and interact with the artworks and where photographing oneself with an exhibit is generally considered gauche. At self-guided 'trick art gallery' ArtVo – which stretches across several different zones – visitors can do all these things and more, becoming part of the artwork themselves through optical illusion. Fantasy is the gallery's current theme, and there are larger-than-life hand-painted murals depicting oceans, polar ice caps, outer space and lush forests cascading to the floor. It's ideal for children. Immerse yourself in zines at Sticky Institute The wonderful world of zines and DIY ethics and the enduring spirit of punk is on full display at the Sticky Institute. Part open-resource working space and part non-profit retail space, Sticky Institute – run by a dedicated team of volunteers – offers a space for zinemakers to create, showcase and sell their work and provides access to essential tools such as typewriters, long-armed staplers and photocopiers. If you're new to the world of zines but interested in learning more, Sticky Institute runs workshops every fortnight and two annual zine fairs: the 17-year-old Festival of the Photocopier Zine Fair in February and the Hallozeen Zine Fair, a Halloween-themed event in October. Explore the Johnston Collection The Johnston Collection is a hidden gem, so hidden no one knows the exact address of the 1860s townhouse that contains it. All exhibitions, lectures and events must be pre-booked and 10 minutes before your session starts, you'll meet a staff member from the Pullman Melbourne on the Park who will transport you to the townhouse. Once you're there, discover more than 1500 items predominantly of English 18th-century origin – ranging from ceramics, furniture and glass to horology, metalwork, paintings and textiles – with a selection of items from Europe, India, China and Japan. Tours are limited to eight people, so ready yourself for an intimate experience. Meander through the Art and Heritage Collection Embark on a free guided tour of the City of Melbourne's Art and Heritage Collection, located in the Melbourne Town Hall, and sift through 13,000 exhibits ranging from ornate embroideries and a vintage bottle of Spumante to a ceramic Chiko Roll and 1980s photographs of people watching the Moomba parade. These works respond to and challenge traditional narratives, bring to life emblems of Melbourne cultural life, and provide a glimpse into this city's rich social history.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store