Published 8 November 201410 November 2014 · Announcement Subscriberthon Prizes: The weekend Editorial team Welcome to the weekend of Subscriberthon 2014. Anyone who subscribes, renews or donates to Overland goes into the draw for the following daily prizes – and is also eligible for the major prizes (see below). This year, you can also sign up for an auto-renewing subscription, which means you’ll always be eligible to win at Subscriberthon. This weekend, the prizes are all about culture– a mixture of the highfalutin’ and the lowbrow, with prizes to suit all tastes. Overland depends on the support of its readers. If you enjoy the magazine, the site, the competition and the events, take out a subscription today. The weekend prizes Day of the Culture Vulture (8 packs): Culture Vulture Pack 1: Melbourne Theatre Company double pass voucher The Vogue Factor by Kirstie Clements (Victory Books) Culture Vulture Pack 2: Melbourne Theatre Company double pass voucher Out of Shape by Mel Campbell Culture Vulture Pack 3: Melbourne Theatre Company double pass voucher Out of Shape by Mel Campbell (Affirm) Culture Vulture Pack 4: Melbourne Theatre Company double pass voucher Social Physics: How Good Ideas Spread – the Lessons from a New Science by Alex Pentland (Scribe) Culture Vulture Pack 5: Malthouse Theatre voucher Animal Madness: How Anxious Dogs, Compulsive Parrots and Elephants in Recovery Help Us Understand Ourselves by Laurel Braitman (Scribe) Culture Vulture Pack 6: Dendy Cinema double pass The Life of I: The New Culture of Narcissism by Anne Manne (MUP) Culture Vulture Pack 7: Dendy Cinema double pass A Portrait of the Brain by Adam Zeman (Yale) Culture Vulture Pack 8: Dendy Cinema double pass) Fairfax: The Rise and Fall by Colleen Ryan (MUP) Everyone who subscribes, renews or donates today also goes into the running for the four major prize packs: The Cinema Novo king of all packs: free movies, books, newspapers and magazines almost forever! Three months of unlimited movies for two people to Cinema Nova (valued at over $1500) A Kobo Arc 7”HD Reader (valued at $249) A $50 voucher for the Movie Reel Independent Video Store A $50 voucher to Paperback Books A 1-year digital subscription to the Saturday Paper ($79) A Bag-o- Brows from the Lifted Brow (valued at $50) The Review of Australian Fiction e-omnibus A subscription to Meanjin (valued at $80) A new release book pack and tote back from Black Inc, which includes: Love Poems by Dorothy Porter (Black Inc) Nona and Me by Clare Atkins (Black Inc) Twiggy by Andrew Burrell (Black Inc) Boganaire: The Rise and Fall of Nathan Tinkler by Paddy Manning (Black Inc) The Whitlam Mob by Mungo Maccallum (Black Inc) Power Failure: The Inside Story of Climate Politics Under Rudd and Gillard (Black Inc) Black Inc Tote bag When I read, I hear music major prize pack 3PBS pack (including $75 Proud PBS annual membership and tote bag and sticker) 3RRR pack (including 3RRR t-shirt, mug, sticker and Radio City book) Monster Threads music t-shirt A $20 Northside Records voucher A $50 voucher for Searchers books and records A Trailer Made dinner voucher for two (valued at $30) 2 tickets to any bandroom show of your choice at Boney 8 bubble cup cocktail vouchers for the Toff in Town (valued at $80) A $50 meal voucher to Cookie Restaurant A Bag-o-Brows from the Lifted Brow (valued at $50) A selection of books for music lovers: Telegraph Avenue: A Novel by Michael Chabon (Harper) Foreign Soil by Maxine Beneba Clarke (Hachette) A Revolution in the Making: 3D Printing, Robots and the Future by Guy Rundle (Affirm Press) Driving Under the Influence by Jenna Martin (Victory Books) The tower of power Story Wine pack A mixed case of newly released wine from Story Wines (valued at $309) A tower of powerful historical and political nonfiction books from Scribe, MUP, Black Inc, PanMac, Monash University Press and donated from Gleebooks that includes: The Gillard Government edited by Chris Aulich (MUP) The Prince: Faith, Abuse and George Pell by David Marr (Black Inc) The Whitlam Mob by Mungo Maccallum (Black Inc) Challenge by Paul Daley (MUP) Inside the Hawke Keating Government: A Cabinet Diary by Gareth Evans (MUP) War from the Ground Up: Twenty-First-Century Combat as Politics by Emile Simpson (Scribe) The Book of Paul: The Wit and Wisdom of Paul Keating compiled by Russell Marks (Black Inc) Tony Speaks: The Wisdom of the Abbott compiled by Russell Marks (Black Inc) Kevin Rudd: Twice Prime Minster by Patrick Weller (MUP) The Hard Sell: The Tricks of Political Advertising by Dee Madigan (MUP) Dangerous Allies by Malcolm Fraser with Cain Roberts (MUP) Why the Germans? Why the Jews?: Envy, Race Hatred and the Prehistory of the Holocaust by Gotz Aly (MUP) Hitler’s Last Witness: The Memories of Hitler’s Bodyguard by Rochus Misch (Scribe) Berlin Ghetto: Herbert Baum and the Anti-Fascist Resistance by Eric Brothers (The History Press) Showdown in Shepherd’s Bush: The 1908 Olympic Marathon and the Three Runners who Launched a Sporting Craze by David Davis (St. Martin’s Press) Biting Through: Five Years in Afghanistan by John Ratcliffe (Scribe) Iran and the United States: An Insider’s View on the Failed Past and the Road to Peace by Seyed Hossein Mousavian (Bloomsbury) Australia 1901-2001: A Narrative History by Andrew Tink (NewSouth) Maestro John Monash: Australia’s Greatest Citizen General by Tim Fischer (Monash University Publishing) Sri Lanka’s Secrets: How the Rajapaksa Regime Gets Away with Murder by Trevor Grant (Monash University Publishing) Northern Lights: The Positive Policy Examples of Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Norway by Andrew Scott (Monash University Publishing) A Sense of Humanity: The Ethical Thoughts of Raimond Gaita edited by Craig Taylor with Melinda Graefe (Monash University Publishing) Jean Galbraith: A writer in the Valley by Meredith Fletcher (Monash University Publishing) David Syme: Man of the Age by Elizabeth Morrison (Monash University Publishing) Trendyville: The Battle for Australia’s Inner Cities by Renate Howe (Monash University Publishing) All I need are books and coffee from Wide Open Road major prize pack Six month’s supply of coffee (sent to you once a fortnight) from Wide Open Road Roastery (valued at $144) A $50 voucher to Avenue Bookstore A Kobo Arc 7”HD Reader (valued at $249) A new release pack of books from Monash University Press: Maestro John Monash: Australia’s Greatest Citizen General by Tim Fischer (Monash University Publishing) Sri Lanka’s Secrets: How the Rajapaksa Regime Gets Away with Murder by Trevor Grant (Monash University Publishing) Northern Lights: The Positive Policy Examples of Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Norway by Andrew Scott (Monash University Publishing) A Sense of Humanity: The Ethical Thoughts of Raimond Gaita edited by Craig Taylor with Melinda Graefe (Monash University Publishing) Jean Galbraith: A writer in the Valley by Meredith Fletcher (Monash University Publishing) David Syme: Man of the Age by Elizabeth Morrison (Monash University Publishing) Trendyville: The Battle for Australia’s Inner Cities by Renate Howe (Monash University Publishing) Editorial team More by Editorial team › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 16 February 202419 February 2024 · Announcement Statement of the Board of Overland Literary Journal Editorial team We, the Board of Overland literary journal, make the following statement in support of Editors-in-chief Evelyn Araluen and Jonathan Dunk and the entire Overland staff. We are a diverse Board made up of writers, unionists, lawyers, academics, activists, and arts industry workers. Our Board includes First Nations peoples as well as members of Australia’s Jewish community. 23 January 202325 January 2023 · Announcement An announcement Editorial team In 2023, as we look towards our 250th edition and prepare for Overland’s 70th anniversary, we wish to make a tangible commitment to improve working conditions for our community, and ensure that whatever funding challenges we might face as a left-wing not-for-profit publisher are not passed on to our contributors. 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