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George Harrison: Living in the Material World

George Harrison:  Living in the Material World

George Harrison: Living in the Material World by Olivia Harrison published by Abrams $49.95

He was the quiet Beatle. The spiritual Beatle. Not as charismatic as the pretty ones, John and Paul, and on stage he would sometimes stare out at the screaming girls and look as though he would rather be elsewhere.

George Harrison’s music has endured though, and his songs have a unique sweetness.

This portrait in photographs, letters and diaries, by George’s wife Olivia, is released to coincide with Martin Scorsese’s documentary; he describes in his foreword how the man who possessed the world at 21 came down on the other side of acclaim and went on to cultivate “harmony, balance, serenity”.

Hard to imagine how hard it must have been, but this glossy book gives a whiff of it — the hard-scrabble childhood in Liverpool, the early days at the Cavern, the craziness, and then the life-long search , in India and elsewhere, for a place of peace.

The story is old but most of the material here is new, including handwritten lyrics to the haunting All Things Must Pass. Give it to your boomer friend or loved one, and watch their eyes grow misty.

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How I Became A Famous Novelist

How I Became A Famous Novelist

How I Became A Famous Novelist, By Steve Hely, Black Inc, $19.95

Pete Tarslaw is a washed-up but well-read loser who works out that the easiest way to make a fortune (plus impress his old girlfriend) is to write a best-selling novel.

He analyses what works, draws up a list of rules (note to self: must have a kindly gentleman dancing in a cornfield) and starts writing The Tornado Ashes Club, a brilliant pastiche of the folksy, fake-literary style which racks up middle American readers.

Only a seriously good writer could choose to write this badly and Hely has honed his wit behind the scenes at 30 Rock and The David Letterman Show; the result is the perfect small gift for anyone who likes to read and laugh wickedly at the same time.

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The Flight Attendant’s Shoe

The Flight Attendant's Shoe

The Flight Attendant’s Shoe by Prudence Black, New South, $49.95

On a chilly international flight the other day, I asked the harried attendant for a blanket. “No blankets on this plane”, she said, before scuttling off with my $3 for a bottle of water.

Ah, the glamour. If it’s tough on passengers, think what it must be like for the women we once affectionately called “hosties”.

Groomed to perfection in their trim uniforms and iconic court shoes, the early hostesses had a job many young girls dreamed of — overlooking the fact they’d be out of it the minute they married.

This lively, picture-packed account of the evolution of the Australian flight attendant — her hair, her clothes, the weird rules of etiquette — will evoke squeaks of recognition and a big nostalgic thank you from someone who remembers the way it was, before cheap fares and mass travel.

Just don’t give it to someone who grew up with cattle class, it’ll only make them depressed.

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How to be a Man

How to be a Man

How to be a Man , by Glenn O’Brien, Hardie Grant, $29.95

A handsome volume to encourage gentlemanly behaviour — the ideal gift for the modern man seeking advice on hair (“nothing perfectly symmetrical”), clothes (“real men wear good socks”) and how to deliver a stinging insult (“be precise and specific; anyone can launch a barrage”).

Most of the advice is sound and pungent, laced with O’Brien’s lengthy elaborations on aspects of manhood, and his own experiences thereof; his observations flirt with wisdom and are blessedly free of the jargon of self-help.

In short, a most improving and entertaining work — and who could disagree with the nomination of George Clooney as the model dandy?

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Michelle Williams dedicates globes win to daughter

Michelle Williams dedicates globes win to daughter

Michelle Williams with her Oscar and with her daughter Matilda.

She may have won herself a Golden Globe for her role in My Week with Marilyn but Michelle Williams says she considers herself a mother first and an actress second.

As she accepted her award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture (Musical or Comedy) category at this year’s 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards, she praised her six-year-old daughter Matilda and dedicated the award to her.

“I consider myself a mother first and an actress second, and so the person I most want to thank is my daughter, my little girl, whose bravery and exuberance is the example that I take with me in my work and in my life,” she said during her acceptance speech.

Williams beat the likes of fellow A-listers Charlize Theron and Kate Winslet to take out the award.

See all of the Golden Globes red carpet arrivals!

The 31-year-old continued to praise her daughter, whom she welcomed in 2005 with then-boyfriend Heath Ledger, throughout her speech.

“I want to say thank you for sending me off to this job every day with a hug and a kiss. I couldn’t have done it any other way. It made me so excited to come home at night,” she said.

“And for suffering for six months of bedtime stories, where all the princesses were read aloud in a Marilyn Monroe-sounding voice.”

William’s also thanked the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for bestowing her with the same Award Monroe won “more than 50 years ago.”

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Lose 5 kilos in 2 weeks: Day 10

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Want to know how to lose five kilos in two weeks? Elle Macpherson’s trainer James Duigan shows you how!

When it comes to losing weight, just like everything in life we need to a little bit of inspiration to achieve our goals. Elle Macpherson’s trainer James Duigan has come on board for the Woman’s Day diet in 2012 and shares with us all of his top tips. “I am thrilled to contribute to The Woman’s Day Diet 2012,” he said.

“You’ll find all your favourite WD diet recipes – kJ-crunched, cooked and tested in the WD test kitchen – plus a few of my own recipes, diet tips and the workouts that get my celebrity clients in tip-top shape.”

Make sure you follow the rules, work out plan, eat two snacks from the snack list per day and stick to the portion sizes.

Top tip: Please note foods in bold are free kj and you can eat as much as you like.

  • You should lose 1-2kgs a week (up to 5kgs for heavier women), depending on your starting weight. The total daily kJ count is 5500-7000kJ. This compares to the average of 8000-9000kJ for a 70kg Australian woman;

  • Eat lots of green vegetables or a fibre supplement. Fibre helps reduce “bat wings” and “bingo arms” by eliminating toxins;

  • Limit alcohol to four standard drinks a week. A 400kJ glass of wine replaces one snack.

  • Your body converts wheat to sugar faster than any other grain. So try and avoid bread and pasta, if you can.

  • All breakfasts on the diet can be swapped with other breakfasts, lunches with lunches and dinners with dinners.

  • One coffee per day is allowed. After that, drink green tea.

  • All beakfasts on the four week diet are interchangeable with other breakfasts, lunches with lunches and dinners with dinners;

  • Studies show that low-fat yoghurts, for instance, are loaded with sugar and sodium to make up for the blandness of having no fat. So, eat real butter, yoghurt and milk and cheese. Keep the doses small, though, says James.Snack ListEach day choose from any two of the following:1 apple and 1 matchbox-sized serve full-fat cheese (700kJ);

  • Vegetable sticks and ¼ cup hummus (600kJ);

  • 1 piece of fruit and a handful of nuts (400kJ);

  • 100g natural yoghurt with berries, cinnamon and almonds (400kJ)

  • 1 small latte (400kJ)

  • 2 Corn Thins with 1 teaspoon no added sugar peanut butter (400kJ)

  • Make a yoghurt paddle pop (with fruit and nuts) (450kJ)

  • Frozen grapes and bananas (480kj)

  • Fruit smoothie with added fibre or bran (400kJ)

  • 4 squares dark chocolate (400kJ)

  • Green smoothie (blend up celery, cucumber, lime, ginger, mint) (negligible).

  • 1 apple and 1 matchbox-sized serve full-fat cheese (700kJ);

  • Vegetable sticks and ¼ cup hummus (600kJ);

  • 1 piece of fruit and a handful of nuts (400kJ);

  • 100g natural yoghurt with berries, cinnamon and almonds (400kJ)

  • 1 small latte (400kJ)

  • 2 Corn Thins with 1 teaspoon no added sugar peanut butter (400kJ)

  • Make a yoghurt paddle pop (with fruit and nuts) (450kJ)

  • Frozen grapes and bananas (480kj)

  • Fruit smoothie with added fibre or bran (400kJ)

  • 4 squares dark chocolate (400kJ)

  • Green smoothie (blend up celery, cucumber, lime, ginger, mint) (negligible).

  • 1 serve of rice or pasta = a fist

  • 1 piece of meat, fish or chicken = the size and width of a deck of cards

  • 1 serve of cheese = one slice, or 4 small cubes that could fit in a matchbox

  • 1 serve of butter = your fingertip

For more great diet and work out tips, plus the full diet plan, see Woman’s Day on sale January 9, 2012.

DISCLAIMER: Please do not embark on a vigorous exercise program without speaking to your doctor first. This advice is general only and does not replace the advice of your doctor or exercise physiologist.

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Great read: Never Knowing

Never Knowing

Never Knowing by Chevy Stevens, Allen & Unwin, $23.99

Sara has never felt she really fitted in with her adoptive family. It’s not that she’s not loved or nurtured, just that she’s different and deep down believes she could never really match up to her parents’ birth children — her two sisters.

So in the build up to her wedding day it seems only natural that Sara would choose to seek out her own birth mother.

This is familiar territory — the misfit adoptee in search of maternal love and justification. But very very quickly, indeed with a whooshing twister of a whirlwind, author Chevy Stevens turns banal into terrifying.

By page 26 we learn that Sara’s mother was the only survivor of the Campsite Killer, who hunted and raped his young victims.

By page 27 we realise Sara’s father is almost certainly said serial killer and he’s still at large. And by page 52 the story’s gone viral with Sara, her birth mother and all her nearest and dearest suddenly in terrible danger.

The shock is instant and immediately sets a cracking pace for what follows as Sara grapples to get to know her mother and becomes caught in a game of cat and mouse with her father who appears to be desperate — pathologically — to get to know her.

She puts her trust in two detectives who have been working for years to nail her psychotic murdering father, and with the end in sight they put our heroine in more and more perilous situations and isolate her even further from her family.

Underlying all these sensational revelations is a more sophisticated subplot unpicking Sara’s perceived relationships with her family members, her husband to be, her daughter and these new trustees who are dictating Sara’s life.

This is a plot full of surprises and also laced with some fascinating human psychology, but above all what Chevy Stevens has achieved is a perfect un-put-down-able thriller shifting the sands of her story right up to the final page. Clear the weekend and start reading.

About the author

Chevy Stevens, 38, was born on Vancouver Island, Canada, where she lives now with husband Connel, but raised on a ranch where she spent most of her time “exploring the woods, or hiding somewhere reading a book with a cat or a dog for company,” she says.

Her father was a navy man, at sea for long stretches leaving her mum to run the ranch. Chevy knew she wanted to be a writer from a very young age but says it wasn’t until she was in her thirties that she felt she had a story to tell.

It was at this point that she quit her real estate job to write her debut novel Still Missing, a best seller which won the 2011 International Thriller of year Award for Best First Novel.

Never Knowing was inspired by a conversation I had with my editor about what it might feel like if you were adopted to find out that your birth father was a murderer, who’d never been caught,” says Chevy.

Her next project is Always Watching and expands the character of Nadine, the psychiatrist who appears in her first two books.

JOIN THE AWW BOOK CLUB

In 30 words or less, tell us what is great about a book you are reading at the moment. The best critique will win The AWW Cooking School cookbook, valued at $74.95, and be printed in the July issue of The Weekly. Simply visit aww.com.au/bookclub, or email [email protected], or write to The Great Read, GPO Box 4178, Sydney, NSW 2001.

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Nicole Kidman says she is boring

While most celebrities were “face-down drunk” as George Clooney put it following the Golden Globes after party, Nicole Kidman was not one of them.

In fact the Aussie actress admitted she was “boring”.

“I don’t drink [alcohol],” she told US Weekly “See how boring I am. I’ll have sparking water tonight.”

And her decision is not surprising considering her husband Keith Urban has a history of alcoholism.

The glamorous couple looked flawless as they walked the red carpet with Nicole saying it took her “about the same” amount of time to get ready as her husband.

Flick through the pictures of the Golden Globes after party here.

See all of the Golden Globes red carpet arrivals!

Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban on the red carpet and at the Official HBO after party.

Lindsay Lohan and Kim Kardashian arrive at the after party.

Michelle Williams strikes a pose for pal Busy Philipps.

Guy Pearce and actress Piper Perabo.

Nicky and Paris Hilton and Elle Macpherson arrive at the after party.

Mila Kunis and Mark Wahlberg.

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Lose 5 kilos in 2 weeks: Day 9

Want to know how to lose five kilos in two weeks? Elle Macpherson’s trainer James Duigan shows you how!

When it comes to losing weight, just like everything in life we need to a little bit of inspiration to achieve our goals. Elle Macpherson’s trainer James Duigan has come on board for the Woman’s Day diet in 2012 and shares with us all of his top tips. “I am thrilled to contribute to The Woman’s Day Diet 2012,” he said.

“You’ll find all your favourite WD diet recipes – kJ-crunched, cooked and tested in the WD test kitchen – plus a few of my own recipes, diet tips and the workouts that get my celebrity clients in tip-top shape.”

Make sure you follow the rules, work out plan, eat two snacks from the snack list per day and stick to the portion sizes.

Top tip: Please note foods in bold are free kj and you can eat as much as you like.

  • You should lose 1-2kgs a week (up to 5kgs for heavier women), depending on your starting weight. The total daily kJ count is 5500-7000kJ. This compares to the average of 8000-9000kJ for a 70kg Australian woman;

  • Eat lots of green vegetables or a fibre supplement. Fibre helps reduce “bat wings” and “bingo arms” by eliminating toxins;

  • Limit alcohol to four standard drinks a week. A 400kJ glass of wine replaces one snack.

  • Your body converts wheat to sugar faster than any other grain. So try and avoid bread and pasta, if you can.

  • All breakfasts on the diet can be swapped with other breakfasts, lunches with lunches and dinners with dinners.

  • One coffee per day is allowed. After that, drink green tea.

  • All beakfasts on the four week diet are interchangeable with other breakfasts, lunches with lunches and dinners with dinners;

  • Studies show that low-fat yoghurts, for instance, are loaded with sugar and sodium to make up for the blandness of having no fat. So, eat real butter, yoghurt and milk and cheese. Keep the doses small, though, says James.Snack ListEach day choose from any two of the following:1 apple and 1 matchbox-sized serve full-fat cheese (700kJ);

  • Vegetable sticks and ¼ cup hummus (600kJ);

  • 1 piece of fruit and a handful of nuts (400kJ);

  • 100g natural yoghurt with berries, cinnamon and almonds (400kJ)

  • 1 small latte (400kJ)

  • 2 Corn Thins with 1 teaspoon no added sugar peanut butter (400kJ)

  • Make a yoghurt paddle pop (with fruit and nuts) (450kJ)

  • Frozen grapes and bananas (480kj)

  • Fruit smoothie with added fibre or bran (400kJ)

  • 4 squares dark chocolate (400kJ)

  • Green smoothie (blend up celery, cucumber, lime, ginger, mint) (negligible).

  • 1 apple and 1 matchbox-sized serve full-fat cheese (700kJ);

  • Vegetable sticks and ¼ cup hummus (600kJ);

  • 1 piece of fruit and a handful of nuts (400kJ);

  • 100g natural yoghurt with berries, cinnamon and almonds (400kJ)

  • 1 small latte (400kJ)

  • 2 Corn Thins with 1 teaspoon no added sugar peanut butter (400kJ)

  • Make a yoghurt paddle pop (with fruit and nuts) (450kJ)

  • Frozen grapes and bananas (480kj)

  • Fruit smoothie with added fibre or bran (400kJ)

  • 4 squares dark chocolate (400kJ)

  • Green smoothie (blend up celery, cucumber, lime, ginger, mint) (negligible).

  • 1 serve of rice or pasta = a fist

  • 1 piece of meat, fish or chicken = the size and width of a deck of cards

  • 1 serve of cheese = one slice, or 4 small cubes that could fit in a matchbox

  • 1 serve of butter = your fingertip

For more great diet and work out tips, plus the full diet plan, see Woman’s Day on sale January 9, 2012.

DISCLAIMER: Please do not embark on a vigorous exercise program without speaking to your doctor first. This advice is general only and does not replace the advice of your doctor or exercise physiologist.

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Kelsey Grammer’s wife expecting twins

Kelsey Grammer and his new wife Kayte Walsh are expecting twins.
Kelsey Grammer and Kayte Walsh at the Golden Globes.

Kelsey Grammer and his new wife Kayte Walsh are expecting twins.

Kelsey, 56, and former flight attendant Kayte, 30, revealed their baby news in People magazine earlier today.

Just hours after the announcement, the happy couple attended the Golden Globes in Los Angeles.

Kayte looked lovely in a peach-coloured gown, which showed off her growing baby bump, and the couple seemed unable to take their eyes off each other as they walked the red carpet.

Kelsey topped off his blissful day by winning the Best Actor in a TV Drama award for his performance in new political show Boss and thanked Kayte profusely in his acceptance speech.

“This is very nice. I’d like to thank my wife Kayte for the future,” he said. “What a magnificent year it’s been.”

Kelsey continued to praise his wife backstage, raving about her warmth and kindness.

“I am really looking forward to meeting these arrivals! Kayte will be an extraordinary mother,” he said. “She is one of the most loving, warm human beings.”

It’s not the first time Kayte has been pregnant with Kelsey’s child. She suffered a miscarriage in October 2010, just three months after she started dating Kelsey.

Kelsey and Kayte married in February 2011, 15 days after his divorce from his third wife Camille Grammer was finalised.

The actor has four children, Mason, 10, and Jude, seven, with Camille Grammer, and two children from two previous relationships.

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