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The Passage

The PassageBY JUSTIN CRONIN, ORION, $35.

This, the first book in a trilogy from Harvard graduate, university English professor and novelist Justin Cronin, has already netted a $4.4million book deal and $2.07 million in film rights, with the movie due to be made by Robin Hood director Ridley Scott.

This is a weighty (766 pages) post-apocalyptic tale of military human drug experiments gone wrong, with nuclear chips implanted in people’s necks, “weaponised bodies” at large and a terrifying breakdown of society. Cronin’s effortlessly deft prose, description and characterisation grasp you by the throat from the outset.

As the tension mounts, the worlds of a six-year-old girl abandoned at a convent, her saviour and surrogate father – an FBI agent with a heart – and that of a death row inmate and innocent, commuted to secret government drug experiment Project Noah, curiously interweave. Prepare to page turn – at speed.

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Kylie lets down her guard

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In a candid interview with Chrissy Iley, the singer reveals how she is still waiting for the all-clear from breast cancer, why she stopped using Botox and how, at 42, she is in love – again.

Talking to Kylie Minogue, I can’t help but feel that I know her. Not just from the many interviews over time, but because she’s allowing herself to be known – something that’s new for her. In the past, she didn’t really want people to get her. These days, she’s friends with vulnerability, sees its point, its strength even.

In pictures: Kylie’s stellar career

Before – certainly before the cancer and even coming out of it – she didn’t want to be known. That was just too invasive. She was too shy. The cancer forced her to let people in, in a way that she had not welcomed before because she’s always been guarded, perfectionist, ambiguous. Comfortable being an equation in people’s heads that was something like Neighbours plus I Should Be So Lucky, Michael Hutchence, hotpants, Can’t Get You Out Of My Head, cancer survivor, icon, equals Kylie.

Gradually, there was a point where Kylie thought that it was okay to be herself. I talked to Stuart Price, who was the executive producer on her new album, Aphrodite. “Early on, I said this should be 100 per cent you singing about the things that people had a feeling that went on for you in your life, that you’ve never spoken about,” he said. “It’s good to reveal ups and downs on record and what she brought to the studio was a combination of joy, sadness and confusion. You can connect to what she’s been through.”

While the UK was gripped by its post-election stand-off, only one thing knocked politics off the front pages – and that was Kylie’s bum. Wearing hotpants in a shot taken at a video shoot for the single All The Lovers.

“I was not expecting to be wearing that kind of outfit ever again,” she says, laughing. “In fact, the brief for the video, pardon the pun, was long, flowing dresses. But when I got there, the director said, ‘I think of you and I think hotpants’. And then the long dresses wouldn’t work, so I thought I would go with it. But some paparazzi were outside and that’s how those shots happened. But I survived.”

Related video Kylie rocks Glastonbury

Kylie more than survived. It turned out to be a celebration. “Now it gets written about because I’m in that age group: ‘She’s in her 40s and she’s still got it’,” Kylie says. “I’m suddenly in that age range where you’re spoken about like that and I’m like, ‘Shut up!’, because at some point it won’t be.”

Weirdly, in all the times I’ve met Kylie, I’ve never heard her moan. Even when all her hair fell out and I suggested she might have been depressed, she said, “When you put it in perspective, it’s a sign your treatment is doing what it’s supposed to do”.

When she broke up with French actor Olivier Martinez, she never bitched about him or was bitter. “I’m a fatalist. I always feel that a relationship runs for the duration it’s meant to.”

She certainly doesn’t complain about her current inamorato, Spanish model Andres Velencoso. The couple met about 18 months ago, at a party for the burlesque dancer Dita Von Teese.

“He just left this morning,” she says. “We had takeaway Spanish last night because I’m very good friends with the Spanish restaurant. I liked it before I met him.”

Do you speak Spanish? “No, but I’ve started to understand it a little and I recorded a version of All The Lovers in Spanish. Andres and I were in Spain, driving in the car, listening to mixes, and I can’t remember if it was him or me who said I wonder what this would sound like in Spanish. So I thought, ‘Let’s try it’, and he did a translation for me.”

Interesting that she doesn’t remember who it was. It shows that she’s close to him. “Yes,” she says, smiling. Is there a lot of separation involved? “We try not to leave it too long between seeing each other. But he’s used to travelling. I’m used to travelling. That’s how the relationship started. It works for me and I think it works for him.”

Do you prefer it? “In a way, to have time to do your own thing, to be compartmentalised like that, yes, I think you’re right. When I try to do everything at once, that’s when I have a meltdown.”

Your say: Why do you love Kylie? Are you looking forward to hearing her new album Aphrodite? Share your thoughts below.

Read more of our exclusive chat with Kylie Minogue in the July issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly. Out now with our Silvers Sirens on the cover.

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Who will be the next Julie?

Photography by Grant Matthews. Styling by Georgia Ashdown

Photography by Grant Matthews. Styling by Georgia Ashdown

As Julie Goodwin plays mother to this year’s MasterChef hopefuls, she tells Larry Writer that, after winning last year, she’s finally living her dream – despite those marriage rumours.

When Julie Goodwin meets Marion Grasby at an inner-Sydney studio for The Weekly’s photo shoot, last year’s MasterChef winner gives this year’s girl-most-likely one of her huge mumsy smiles and flings her arms wide. “Come on, love, give us a hug,” she says and engulfs Marion, bone-weary after a gruelling day’s filming, in an embrace that says, “Hang in there, kid. I know what you’re going through. If you do your very, very best and don’t give up, everything will be all right”.

Julie Goodwin joins The Weekly

No one’s better placed than Julie to offer Marion, 27 – one of the most accomplished contestants in MasterChef’s second series – a recipe for success. Since triumphing on Network Ten’s reality show, Julie, 39, has become a one-woman culinary phenomenon. She writes for The Weekly, her cookbook Our Family Table sold more than 110,000 copies in its first weeks on sale, she’s soon to star in her own cooking show on the Nine Network, is resident cook on Nine’s Today and folksily spruiks tomato sauce, homewares and plastic wrap.

“My advice to Marion, Claire [Winton-Burn, who has also come to be photographed] and the other contestants,” says Julie, “is no matter how fraught it gets in that house, you must find those inner reserves to stick it out.

“They’ll feel like I did, beaten down and depressed when I desperately wanted to go home to my family, but I persevered despite my loneliness, my sadness when friends were eliminated and my terror at having to put my food in front of the judges, who are nice, but bloody intimidating.”

Related video Deb Thomas discusses a stunning magazine makeover for ‘MasterChef’ Julie Goodwin

Bubbly and funny, despite her long day, student and former journalist Marion says Julie is an inspiration. “We have things in common,” Marion says. “We enjoy food, Julie’s mother and grandmother taught her to cook as my mum, Noi, taught me, and Julie had loved ones cheering her on at home, just as my partner, Tim, is supporting me. Julie wants her own restaurant and my dream is to run a rustic restaurant in a winery with Tim.

“Being a contestant is demanding and emotional. Critics stick it to us because there are so many tears shed, but winning means a lot, so why wouldn’t we get teary? The rest of our lives might depend on how we make a macaroon!”

Your say: Do you watch MasterChef? Who would you like to see win this season? Do you think the contestants get too emotional? Share your thoughts below.

Read more of this story in the July issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

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In Diana’s footsteps

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On their historic first royal tour together, princes William and Harry prove they have come of age in the image of their beloved mother, carrying on her caring legacy. Suellen Dainty reports.

It’s been dubbed the “budget special” or the “buy-one, get-one-free” offer. Officially, though, this is known as the first royal overseas tour by princes William and Harry together. They chose Africa for the historic event, with Prince Harry arriving on June 14 and his elder brother the next day.

The setting could not be more scenic – Botswana and the kingdom of Lesotho, a long-standing favourite of both young men. Yet the two countries could not be more different. Botswana, rich in wildlife and diamonds, is one of the continent’s most prosperous nations, while Lesotho, beset by poverty and HIV/AIDS, is one of its poorest.

In pictures: Our love affair with the Royals

In pictures: Royals weddings

The charities backed by the princes are different as well. Prince William supports Tusk, a long-established wildlife and conservation charity active throughout Botswana and Kenya. Prince Harry has chosen Sentebale, the charity he and Lesotho’s Prince Seeiso founded to help educate and support orphans and HIV-positive children in Lesotho.

Related video June 25, 2010: Royal Correspondent for Mail on Sunday Katie Nicholl joins TODAY to look at the love lives of Prince William and Prince Harry

After their laddish years of London clubs and late-night parties, this tour was an opportunity for both princes to prove their maturity and acceptance of their regal responsibilities. That they were performing to a 60-strong international press corps would have jangled the nerves of even the most steely. Yet both men have clearly grown up and are happy to be back in the country they love almost as much as England. William visited Botswana in his gap year and Harry has travelled to the country at least 10 times, mostly in a private capacity.

Your say: What do you think of the Royals? Who do you think will be the next King of England? Share with us below.

Read more of this article in the July issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

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Pixie Skase: I feel desperately sorry

Photography by George Fetting.

Photography by George Fetting.

Today, Pixie Skase lives in a modest two-bedroom flat in Melbourne. It’s a far cry from the lavish lifestyle she enjoyed with late husband Christopher. Pixie opens her heart to Sue Smethurst, in her first major interview in almost 10 years

Even during the excesses of the 1980s, the extravagance of Christopher and Pixie Skase was legendary. For the opening of their Mirage resort, which lasted five days and cost more than $1 million, chartered jets flew glitterati in from around the world, Krug champagne flowed freely and John Farnham sang for an A-list gathering of high-rollers, politicians and Hollywood celebrities. Their grand mansion on the Brisbane River was the most expensive in Queensland and when the couple commissioned a $6 million yacht to entertain clients, Pixie’s finishing touches were Hermès ashtrays and Christofle silverware.

In pictures: Stars who lost it all

Everyone wanted a piece of their glittering lifestyle – but that was then.

In her first interview since the death of Christopher in 2001, the widow of Australia’s most famous fugitive tells The Weekly about her new, reclusive life and the peace it has brought her. Since she returned to Australia 18 months ago, Pixie has lived in a rented, two-bedroom flat in her old stomping ground of Toorak, with her husky, Nievis.

“I don’t dwell on the past,” she says. “I’ve made a new life and I don’t look back. So many people have said to me, ‘Oh, Pixie, you must miss that lifestyle’, but I don’t. It was another time in my life, another era.”

Being home, she says, is bliss. “I dearly love being here and I am so grateful I’ve been given the opportunity to come home. It is just wonderful to be able to walk around familiar streets of Melbourne and enjoy the autumn leaves falling around the Botanic Gardens, things that I missed so much when we were in Spain.”

Pixie gave her last major interview in 2001, at her Majorcan home, in the days after her husband’s death from stomach cancer. She was grief-stricken, terrified of confronting life on her own and fiercely unapologetic about the 10-year battle they waged against his extradition for charges relating to the $1.5 billion collapse of the Qintex empire. Yet time heals and the grandmother of seven looks remarkably at ease, like the weight of the world has been lifted off her shoulders.

She says she does not miss Christopher. “My life has moved on from my time with him,” she says. “We had a wonderful, passionate relationship and our marriage was exhilarating. The sorrow and grief I felt after his death was all-consuming. I felt totally lost; it was like my whole heart had been wrenched out and I didn’t think I could live without him.

“That grief sat on my shoulders like a block of cement and I had to let it go. I had to accept that he was gone and I had to accept all of the things that happened in our life couldn’t be changed.”

At its height, the Qintex leisure empire was estimated to be worth $2.2 billion, with assets including the Seven Network, Hollywood’s MGM Studios, the then Brisbane Bears AFL club and, the jewel in the crown, the lavish Mirage resort at Port Douglas.

As Australia went into recession in 1989, Qintex collapsed with corporate debts of $1.5 billion and personal debts to the Skases of $172 million. It was a spectacular fall from grace and the couple fled Australia, seeking refuge from creditors on the idyllic Spanish island of Majorca. Christopher faced 32 Australian Securities and Investments Commission charges relating to fraud, but avoided extradition on the grounds he was too sick to travel.

He was labelled a crook, a corporate cowboy and a thief, yet Christopher maintained he’d done nothing wrong, arguing that the collapse of his empire was due to successive governments and the banks. His wife was his most loyal ally.

Pixie has previously remained tight-lipped about the collapse of Qintex, but has broken her silence to The Weekly, saying it’s time to speak out because “when untruths get repeatedly told they become fact”.

The day the business collapsed, she says, was “a whirlwind, just petrifying. It went down like a pack of cards and it was so out of left field. Christopher came home and locked himself in the library. He was very rattled and I knew something was wrong. He had finance people and bank people all around him – it was frenzied. He shielded me from a lot of it, but it was like being in freefall.

“I recall him saying, ‘I feel like I am falling down a glass tube with everyone on the outside and I can’t hear them or touch them.’ It was the most ghastly time and I remember just feeling constantly sick.”

In the early days, Qintex was a family-run operation that began in the living room of their Melbourne home. Pixie worked as Christopher’s secretary and was both a confidante and sounding board. She attended the company’s annual general meetings and says she and Christopher knew many of the shareholders personally, often having tea or coffee with them after the meetings. As the company and their wealth expanded, they moved the operation to Brisbane and, she admits, Christopher made crucial mistakes.

“We lost a lot of that personal contact, which was a great shame,” she says. “The gel that held Qintex together began to disperse and I don’t think Christopher realised quickly enough.”

Christopher could be a poor judge of character, Pixie says. “He trusted too many people and gave too many people the benefit of the doubt. When issues arose, he allowed things to fester, where he should have fixed them. I feel desperately sorry for the shareholders, as did Christopher.

“The only time I have ever seen him cry was when he was discussing the impact of the collapse on the shareholders with Robert Holmes à Court, who was a dear friend.”

Related videoEditor-in-Chief Helen McCabe discusses what’s making news today.

Your say: What do you think of Pixie Skase? Share with us below.

Read more of this article in the July issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

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Liz Taylor’s secret love letters

It was a love affair that burned intensely. In this extract from the new book Furious Love, we reveal the undying passion between Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton through his intimate letters to her.

When asked by Time magazine, a few years ago, to name the five great love affairs of all time, the Texas-born gossip columnist Liz Smith didn’t even have to think about who would occupy first place. The Burtons, of course. Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor “were the most vivid example of a public love affair that I can think of”. Their 13-year saga was the most notorious, publicised, celebrated and vilified love affair of its day.

In pictures: Elizabeth Taylor

Indeed, their 10-year marriage, followed by a divorce, remarriage and a final divorce, was often called “the marriage of the century” in the press. “On the face of it,” said Liz Smith, “Elizabeth Taylor was just totally arrogant. She’d walk out in capri pants and her Cleopatra make-up and her kerchief, and go off to a local restaurant and drink up a storm with Burton. That’s part of what excited the public: her vulgarity and her arrogance and the money. Oh God, their love story had everything.”

It also brought us the modern brand of celebrity: the relentless paparazzi, the continuous press exposure, the public airing of private grief. In short, it brought us “Liz and Dick”, a tabloid shorthand that they hated, but that stood for their extravagance and all-too-public lives.

They were Hollywood royalty. But like any other married couple, they had to deal with family squabbles, balancing two careers – in short, the real marriage of two people trying to live their lives together.

Your say: What do you think of Elizabeth Taylor?

Extracted from Furious Love: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and the Marriage of the Century by Sam Kashner and Nancy Schoenberger. Published by JR Books in hardback, $49.99, on July 15, and distributed by Scribo (in Australia) and Hachette (in NZ). Read more of this exclusive extract in the July issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly. Out now with our Silvers Sirens on the cover.

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Des Campbell: The killer who preyed on women

June Ingham: Photography by Alana Landsberry. Janette Aldred: Photography by Russell Pell

June Ingham gave Campbell her love and most of her money. Janette Aldred met Campbell on an internet dating site and had an affair with him.

Last month, a jury found Des Campbell guilty of murdering his wife, Janet. While she paid the ultimate price, Janet was not the only woman he lied to, manipulated and cheated out of large amounts of money.

June Ingham wishes that she had never met Des Campbell, the man at the centre of one of Australia’s longest-running criminal investigations. “I fell in love with him, but when he told me he didn’t want me anymore, he might as well have plunged a knife into my heart,” says June, now 60. “I gave up a life with my family and friends in England, and came halfway across the world to be with him, but then he discarded me like a piece of rubbish. To this day, I wonder how someone could be so cruel to another human being.”

June is one of a long list of women who found themselves swept up in the affairs of Desmond Campbell, a 52-year-old former ambulance driver found guilty last month in the NSW Supreme Court of murdering Janet, his 49-year-old wife of six months, by pushing her off a cliff in 2005.

The four-week trial was one of the most intensely watched prosecutions of the decade, not only because of the callous crime, but because of the disregard with which he held women. He was, the court heard, a serial philanderer – a classic love rat – carrying on affairs behind the back of his unsuspecting bride, who was “madly, passionately” in love with him.

The court found that Campbell pushed his wife from the edge of a 50-metre cliff during a camping trip to the Royal National Park, south of Sydney, around 7.20pm on March 24, 2005. He denied the allegation, claiming Janet had tripped and fallen over the cliff after leaving their tent for “a pee”.

Rescue teams found Janet’s lacerated body hours later at the cliff base. Campbell used a rope to clamber down a gully, telling police he’d tried to resuscitate Janet, though he “knew it was pointless, that she was gone”.

Read more of this story in the July issue of The Weekly on sale now.

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A pill that combats man flu?

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If you’re sick of your man becoming all “woe is me” and retreating under the duvet at the merest sign of a sniffle then help could be at hand: scientists have developed a pill that targets man flu.

Australian researchers have created a daily lozenge that dramatically reduces the likelihood of being laid low by a bad cold or flu, if you’re a man that is.

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The sweet-like lozenge, which dissolves in the mouth, contains small amounts of interferon alpha, a protective protein that the body makes naturally to combat viruses, the UK’s Daily Mail reported.

The treatment works by tricking the body into thinking it is at risk so it gets ready to fight off bacteria.

Associate Professor Manfred Beilharz, from Perth’s University of Western Australia, tested 200 people, half taking the treatment and half a placebo. All were then asked to take note of flu symptoms and any time they took off work for the next four months.

While those who took the lozenge were no less likely to catch a cold or flu, they were much less likely to be bedridden by it.

It is not yet clear why the treatment works so much better with men.

One suggestion is that men’s immune systems are so much weaker in the first place that they appreciate the boost more.

Previous studies have found that men are more susceptible to infection by bacteria than women.

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Further tests are being carried out to see if a change in dosage will offer similar benefits to women.

If the trials are successful, the treatment could be available on prescription by 2012.

Your say: Do you think that men are worse at handling colds than women? Share your thoughts below.

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Katie Price to sue Peter Andre over child access claims

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Katie Price is considering taking legal action against ex-husband Peter Andre over his claims she won’t let him see Katie’s eight-year-old autistic son, Harvey.

“She is being dignified but feels seeking legal advice is her only option,” an unnamed source close to Katie told the UK’s Daily Mirror.

Aussie singer Peter claims Katie won’t let him see the son she had with former football player Dwight Yorke until Peter gets a specially qualified nanny who she approves of.

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“Katie is referenced in nearly every article that Andre does,” the source told the paper.

“His career seems to be based around slagging Katie off and he is finding increasingly more annoying ways in which to do it.

“She hasn’t been responding because she is concerned that in five years time, the kids will start looking on the Internet to see what their parents say about each other and it will be a disaster.

“Katie is going up the wall because she’s not wanted to respond because she is putting the kids first.”

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The Middletons – The suspicion turns to Harry

The Middletons - The suspicion turns to Harry

My boss Roy Anderson looked at me in some amazement.

“Your brother Charlie, cautious and careful where both heart and money are concerned? I don’t believe it.”

I handed him his coffee. “Actually, neither do I, but it makes a change, doesn’t it? He’s putting any furniture he wants to keep into storage and coming over to Sydney.

“He plans to buy a couple of units to put into his superannuation fund, which must be looking pretty healthy by now. Then he’s off to Mudgee and his lady love.”

Roy snorted. “Where it will all fall apart and all his good intentions will be for nought.”

“Don’t be like that. At least he’s trying. He’s on a promise for a few weeks in a restaurant, then he’s hoping he’ll have something more permanent by the wine festival in September.”

“The wine festival sounds good. Maybe we should all go. But in the meantime, there’s the little matter of John Buchanan.”

“Do you think Lionel is on the right track, that Harry Maloney is trying to hoodwink us?”

Roy looked up as the lift door slammed shut. It might be very old and break down occasionally, but it’s a good warning system.

“Unless I’m very much mistaken, that’s Dad and Louisa arriving.”

With that, Lionel Anderson walked in, and he was followed by Roy’s wife, private investigator Louisa Hammond.

“Nothing like the smell of coffee in the morning,” Lionel exclaimed. Having a real case to get his teeth into had brought back his old energy. I was beginning to wonder if his retirement and move to a consultant’s role had been designed to allow Roy to find his feet and not because his elderly father needed looking after. As I poured the coffee, Louisa placed some little Danish pastries onto a plate.

Roy looked concerned. “But there are four of us, Louisa. That means …”

“That means you only get one,” she said.

Roy pulled a face. “That’s not fair.”

“With your paunch,” Louisa said, “fair doesn’t come into it.”

Lionel tapped his desk. “Now, now, children, let’s get down to business. Louisa, tell us what your team found out in its forensic search of Maloney’s office.”

Louisa pulled a folder out of her briefcase. “As you know, we were looking for evidence that one of Maloney’s solicitors, Rosanna Jenkins – who, by the way, is a real sexpot – might have been leaking confidential information to some of her criminal mates.

“We worked over the weekend, so as not to tip our hand. Harry had told everyone he was having a new computer security system installed so staff would have to leave their laptops and so on with us.”

Lionel reached out for a second pastry.

“And they fell for it?”

“As far as that goes, Lionel, as with all good cover stories, there was an element of truth in ours. Their security was full of holes, so we were able to sell Harry Maloney on a much better system.”

Roy looked longingly at the remaining pastry on the plate, and then asked, “And what did you discover?”

“There was nothing in the record of phone calls and emails to indicate that Rosanna Jenkins was leaking information about the crooked cop’s defence, but we did find out something that was very interesting.”

“Louisa,” Roy protested, “please don’t spin it out. Tell us.”

“Rosanna thinks Harry is dipping into the trust funds of his clients.”

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