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To Infinity and beyond: Mark Best takes over Sydney Tower's revolving restaurant

To Infinity and beyond: Mark Best takes over Sydney Tower's revolving restaurant

Nine years after Mark Best closed Marque restaurant in Surry Hills, the chef will mark his Sydney return with a high-wire act: rewriting the script on revolving restaurants. Infinity by Mark Best will take its first spin atop Sydney Tower on Tuesday, August 12.
One of the country's most celebrated chefs, Best said he was keen to challenge preconceptions about high-altitude dining. 'There's the old maxim, 'The higher you are, the worse the food',' he said. 'I'd never thought about [Sydney Tower] as a location, but the more I did, the more it excited me.'
Best is enthusiastic about the new digs, which are 81 floors above the Sydney CBD. 'You're the first to see sunrise and the last to see sunset,' he said. 'When people come into the city they want to get to the highest point.'
Infinity by Mark Best won't be like the fine-dining Marque, or his one-time spin-off, Pei Modern. 'It's something completely different,' he said. Best is already test-driving dishes for the menu, with steamed bar cod with fish milk and fermented, fried kipfler potatoes, scallops with sea foam and sea urchin crumpets all appearing on the opening menu.
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Oasis singer Liam Gallagher's ex-lover sets record straight about their relationship
Oasis singer Liam Gallagher's ex-lover sets record straight about their relationship

Perth Now

timea day ago

  • Perth Now

Oasis singer Liam Gallagher's ex-lover sets record straight about their relationship

Lisa Moorish has called out the "twisted narrative" that has surrounded her relationship with ex-lover Liam Gallagher. The 53-year-old musician had a romance with the Oasis singer in the late 1990s and they had a daughter, Molly Moorish-Gallagher, together. Molly, now 27, was born on 26 March 1998, and Lisa insists she has had to endure false claims about the nature of her relationship with the Some Might Say singer - who was married to actress Patsy Kensit from April 1997 until their divorce in 2000. Appearing on Best's Suddenly Single podcast, Lisa said: "There's a lot of hate I get from the tabloid press specifically ... [They went along] with this sort of twisted narrative of my relationship with my daughter's father back then. "Once the media write about you in a certain way, it sticks. And people tend to just keep going with that. "So it's very frustrating because on one hand, I don't give a damn what anybody thinks about me. It's none of their business. "But it's also frustrating if you're trying to, sort of, release an album or talk about what you're doing in your creative life, and that's something from 28 years ago, and also without the facts." Lisa first met Liam, 52, in 1993, although she was friends with his older brother and Oasis bandmate Noel Gallagher first. The former Kill City singer describes Noel, 58, as being like "family" to her and a friend whom she cherishes to this day. She said: "I met Molly's dad in the early '90s, I think it was '93, actually it was Noel who I met first. People are a bit Marmite with Noel. In the public domain with the rock star thing people see what they see and they think what they think, fair enough. He's a friend and he's family to me and he's a very good man. I love him dearly. "Liam was actually dating a friend of mine. Just dating. It wasn't anything that serious. And that's how I met those guys. And I worked with them." Liam and Molly have grown very close in the past several years and the song Now That I've Found You - which features on his 2019 solo album Why Me? Why Not. - is inspired by his daughter and is dedicated to her. Lisa is adamant that she and Liam - who is currently on the Oasis Live '25 reunion tour - get on fine, as they are in each other's lives due to Molly. She said: "I didn't see [Liam] for quite a long time … We've both had different relationships since then, but we don't not get on.' Lisa also has a son, Astile Doherty, with Libertines frontman Pete Doherty, whose friendship she has always valued despite their romantic relationship ending. She said: "I love Pete in so many ways as a friend and someone that was much more in my life and my son's life.' But Lisa insists her days of dating rock stars are definitely over. She explained: "One of my big problems always was that I was a little Florence Nightingale. The rehab for broken boys is now closed for good. Instead of thinking, Liam did this or Pete did that, in the last 10 years I've started to look at who I'm ending up with. You can only change things if you look at yourself. When you have self-esteem issues, you don't make the greatest picks in relationships, and don't realise it's you that needs fixing and sorting out.' Lisa is currently writing a book about her life that will document her hedonistic days in the 1990s. She said: "I've written the first chapter of a book and so it will be said once and once only and that will be that. But it's not about that. There's a whole tapestry of my life." You can watch the full interview with Lisa Moorish on the Best magazine YouTube page and listen to the interview from your podcast provider.

Looking for something to read? Here are 10 new books to try
Looking for something to read? Here are 10 new books to try

Sydney Morning Herald

time06-08-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Looking for something to read? Here are 10 new books to try

This week's books range from an incongruously sunny haunted-house thriller and some high-ocatane espionage to a celebration of the joys of reading and the history of the dingo species. Happy reading! FICTION PICK OF THE WEEK Notes on Infinity Austin Taylor Michael Joseph, $34.99 Notes on Infinity reminded me of the recent reports of scientific fraud by cancer researcher Professor Mark Smyth. It's science fiction, yes, but it also dives into the cutthroat world of contemporary biomedical research with great perspicacity and psychological insight. Jack and Zoe are gifted scientists who meet in a chemistry lab at MIT. A shared passion for their field predates any romance, and when their research into ageing suggests a treatment to increase human longevity might be viable and just around the corner, research grants and venture capital pour in. Within a few years, they've formed a company that could revolutionise not just the way we live, but how long we live for. But is their venture all it claims to be? As the pair fall genuinely in love, difficult truths – and worse, deceptions – will emerge from the trail of their ambition. Scandal and disaster lie in wait. Taylor has an absorbing writing style, and this sharply crafted campus romance swings effortlessly into the high-pressure environment of scientific research. It also introduces a change of perspective midway, complicating motivations and anchoring the book's inevitable sweep into genuine tragedy. Gothic fiction is supposed to be one of the shadowy arts. Drear and darkness. Fog and fen. Brooding gloom of one kind or another. Sunny days? Not so much, although Rebecca Starford's The Visitor goes to great lengths to invert the usual genre conventions and let the sunshine in. In this haunted house story, expat Laura returns from the UK to Brisbane, following her parents' sudden and mysterious demise in the Queensland outback. Laura must organise their affairs and sell her childhood home, and her 14-year-old daughter Tilly tags along for the ride – only to become increasingly concerned at her mother's strange behaviour. Bizarre events make Tilly wonder if the house might be truly haunted although, with a nosey neighbour in the mix, it's possible a more sinister human plot is afoot. And what of Laura's parents? Were they attempting to escape from the house when they met their deaths? As the characters confront the uncanny, buried trauma comes to light, promised shadows appear, and the novel's disorientations settle into a more classic, if sunlit, gothic tale. Some small fraction of espionage fiction is written by spooks and former spooks. Stella Rimington – the former director general of MI5 – turned to novel-writing in her retirement and Jack Beaumont, as a former French intelligence operative himself, has the same kind of cred. Liar's Game continues the globetrotting action series begun in The Frenchman. This time, French spy Alec de Payns is tasked with safely escorting a North Korean defector, who claims to have knowledge of a cyberattack which could destroy the global economy. When the defector dies in his arms before sharing crucial intel, the failure attracts the ire of his superiors, and it isn't long before another mission unravels. Suddenly, Alec is hung out to dry. He finds himself alone, hunted across South-East Asia and forced to rely on tradecraft to stay ahead of both the law and the lawless, on a solo mission to protect his family from retribution, and root out a sinister conspiracy that wants him dead. It's another fast-paced, high-octane contemporary spy novel from Beaumont, sure to please existing fans of the series and attract new ones into the fold. Eden Mark Brandi Hachette, $32.99 Ex-con Tom Blackburn has been inside for nine years, serving time for accessory to murder. Upon his release, his already narrow chances at rebuilding a life dwindle through further misfortune. He winds up sleeping rough and, following a tip, heads to the Melbourne General Cemetery to find somewhere among the graves. There, he encounters the overseer of the grounds, Cyril, and lucks onto a job as a casual caretaker, with a roof over his head to boot. But the past isn't done with Tom. A journalist is piqued by the mystery of how he came to be involved in the crime that sent him to jail, with questions that bring danger and trauma to the surface. Meanwhile, Cyril offers him a Faustian bargain that could turn what at first, seemed to be a source of sanctuary into a hellish position indeed. Melbourne – and particularly, its famed cemetery – are vividly depicted in Mark Brandi's Eden, and the novel explores gritty social and ethical problems with more intelligence and conscience than most crime fiction. Climbing in Heels Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas Corvus, $34.99 The hottest talent agency in 1980s Hollywood is about to get a shake-up. Three young secretaries are on the rise – fast-talking Valley Girl Beanie Rosen; posh and well-connected English beauty Mercedes Baxter; and Ella Gaddy, a blueblood from Kentucky – and they're determined to stake a claim in what remains solidly Mad Men territory. They'll execute a hostile takeover… or resort to tricks that make the Hollywood swamp so slimy, if that's what it takes. The tale of ambitious women in the pre-#Me Too Hollywood landscape could have been fascinating. Unfortunately, the book droops languidly in the middle, there's rather a lot of not-very-well-written sex in it, and the author seems to become sidetracked by the hedonism and corruption (and big hair) of '80s Hollywood, without advancing the plot. Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas has come up with a promising idea for a female friends and avengers narrative – the protagonists become almost the Charlie's Angels of Hollywood talent agents – but it's let down in the execution. NON-FICTION PICK OF THE WEEK The Gifts of Reading for the Next Generation Curated by Jennie Orchard Scribe, $35 'Good luck hides inside bad luck.' Novelist Nguyen Phan Que Mai knows this Vietnamese proverb to be true. When creditors came to claim her family's possessions, the only things they didn't seize were her books. During the dark time that followed, reading became her refuge. In these essays, writers reflect on the books that captured their imaginations when they were young and how they try to instil a passion for reading in the next generation. For Tristan Bancks, a storyteller for page and screen, life changed forever at the age of seven when he and some friends found Where Did I Come From? on the bookshelf. It was, they thought, 'the funniest, weirdest, most mind-boggling book on the planet.' He showed it to more friends and in this way reading became a communal and subversive pursuit. Helping kids fall under the spell of books has never been more urgent. Recent reports show reading for pleasure among children has slumped in Australia. This inspiring collection testifies to the life-changing power of books in a child's life. Plain Life. On thinking, feeling and deciding Antonia Pont NewSouth, $34.99 The word 'plain' is so wonderfully at odds with our flashy, extreme, hungry times. To live a plain life, says Antonia Pont, is to decide that your life is intrinsically 'enough'. This is not a form of low expectations or political acquiescence. If anything, it is a refusal of neoliberalism and the penetration of marketplace values into every aspect of life. As such a stance suggests, Plain Life is not a self-help book offering easily digestible rules for living. Pont's elliptical, playful, philosophical style requires readers slow down and observe the workings of their own minds, be curious about the fears they've suppressed and dare to feel them, and become aware of how they collude in their own misery. Drawing on her practice as a yoga teacher, she urges us to stay in the middle of our experience, the place where we can 'take a tiny holiday from a fixed perspective' and find a vast freedom in that. While this is not a straightforward read, the demands of Plain Life are well worth the effort. The Eagle & the Crow JM Field UQP, $24.99 This is not a book that lends itself to synopsis. In fact, it actively resists the reductive nature of such an enterprise. JM Field, a Gamilaraay man, is primarily speaking to his own people about their kinship system and how it endures in practice and in the 'libraries' held in the heads of Aunties. The system remains robust, he says because 'the architects of it, our old people, created a way of relating, and therefore organising, that colonisation could not break.' While general readers cannot expect to fathom the intricate mathematical nature of this kinship system because they are not of it and have not imbibed it through community, we are left with a better understanding of the complexity and vitality of Indigenous relations and the limits of our own world view. Field combines pithy, poetic statements with a series of essays that contrast Western approaches to knowledge as distinct disciplines 'ripped from context' and Indigenous knowledge in which kinship systems allow for 'participation in something much larger than ourselves.' As you'd expect, there are some dramatic rescue stories in this collection of tales from surf lifesavers. But it's the community, camaraderie and competition surf clubs provide that dominate these yarns. A recurring theme from club elders, many of whom remember the days of the old reel and line, is the thrill of surf-boat races, particularly the George Bass Surf Boat Marathon covering 200 kilometres along the NSW's south coast. A lifesaver from Darwin was 65 when she was asked to join a crew for the event. As she observes with laconic understatement, it was a challenge given the 'dubious ocean conditions' but 'it turned out okay'. This kind of grit is typical of these stories, along with a larrikin spirit and sense of humour. Many people, says John Baker, national president of Surf Lifesaving Australia, think 'we're just a mob of fit people hanging around the beach, wearing funny red and yellow caps', when they are, in fact, a well-trained emergency service dealing with all sorts of trauma. One of the many dissonances of the dingo story is that while Australians were happy to demonise this canine for preying on livestock, we were still ready to believe that Lindy Chamberlain, rather than a dingo, killed her baby. The dingo became an official outlaw after the passing of The Native Dogs Destruction Act in 1875, and it was said that it would be a blessing when this 'untameable brute' was made extinct. When Mark Twain came to Australia 20 years later, he saw a very different creature – 'shapely, graceful, a little wolfish but with a most friendly eye and sociable disposition.' Long before the arrival of Europeans, the dingo had a close relationship with Aboriginal people and had been incorporated into their Dreaming as a spiritual icon. In this history of the dingo, Roland Breckwoldt charts our evolving understanding of this now-threatened native animal.

Looking for something to read? Here are 10 new books to try
Looking for something to read? Here are 10 new books to try

The Age

time06-08-2025

  • The Age

Looking for something to read? Here are 10 new books to try

This week's books range from an incongruously sunny haunted-house thriller and some high-ocatane espionage to a celebration of the joys of reading and the history of the dingo species. Happy reading! FICTION PICK OF THE WEEK Notes on Infinity Austin Taylor Michael Joseph, $34.99 Notes on Infinity reminded me of the recent reports of scientific fraud by cancer researcher Professor Mark Smyth. It's science fiction, yes, but it also dives into the cutthroat world of contemporary biomedical research with great perspicacity and psychological insight. Jack and Zoe are gifted scientists who meet in a chemistry lab at MIT. A shared passion for their field predates any romance, and when their research into ageing suggests a treatment to increase human longevity might be viable and just around the corner, research grants and venture capital pour in. Within a few years, they've formed a company that could revolutionise not just the way we live, but how long we live for. But is their venture all it claims to be? As the pair fall genuinely in love, difficult truths – and worse, deceptions – will emerge from the trail of their ambition. Scandal and disaster lie in wait. Taylor has an absorbing writing style, and this sharply crafted campus romance swings effortlessly into the high-pressure environment of scientific research. It also introduces a change of perspective midway, complicating motivations and anchoring the book's inevitable sweep into genuine tragedy. Gothic fiction is supposed to be one of the shadowy arts. Drear and darkness. Fog and fen. Brooding gloom of one kind or another. Sunny days? Not so much, although Rebecca Starford's The Visitor goes to great lengths to invert the usual genre conventions and let the sunshine in. In this haunted house story, expat Laura returns from the UK to Brisbane, following her parents' sudden and mysterious demise in the Queensland outback. Laura must organise their affairs and sell her childhood home, and her 14-year-old daughter Tilly tags along for the ride – only to become increasingly concerned at her mother's strange behaviour. Bizarre events make Tilly wonder if the house might be truly haunted although, with a nosey neighbour in the mix, it's possible a more sinister human plot is afoot. And what of Laura's parents? Were they attempting to escape from the house when they met their deaths? As the characters confront the uncanny, buried trauma comes to light, promised shadows appear, and the novel's disorientations settle into a more classic, if sunlit, gothic tale. Some small fraction of espionage fiction is written by spooks and former spooks. Stella Rimington – the former director general of MI5 – turned to novel-writing in her retirement and Jack Beaumont, as a former French intelligence operative himself, has the same kind of cred. Liar's Game continues the globetrotting action series begun in The Frenchman. This time, French spy Alec de Payns is tasked with safely escorting a North Korean defector, who claims to have knowledge of a cyberattack which could destroy the global economy. When the defector dies in his arms before sharing crucial intel, the failure attracts the ire of his superiors, and it isn't long before another mission unravels. Suddenly, Alec is hung out to dry. He finds himself alone, hunted across South-East Asia and forced to rely on tradecraft to stay ahead of both the law and the lawless, on a solo mission to protect his family from retribution, and root out a sinister conspiracy that wants him dead. It's another fast-paced, high-octane contemporary spy novel from Beaumont, sure to please existing fans of the series and attract new ones into the fold. Eden Mark Brandi Hachette, $32.99 Ex-con Tom Blackburn has been inside for nine years, serving time for accessory to murder. Upon his release, his already narrow chances at rebuilding a life dwindle through further misfortune. He winds up sleeping rough and, following a tip, heads to the Melbourne General Cemetery to find somewhere among the graves. There, he encounters the overseer of the grounds, Cyril, and lucks onto a job as a casual caretaker, with a roof over his head to boot. But the past isn't done with Tom. A journalist is piqued by the mystery of how he came to be involved in the crime that sent him to jail, with questions that bring danger and trauma to the surface. Meanwhile, Cyril offers him a Faustian bargain that could turn what at first, seemed to be a source of sanctuary into a hellish position indeed. Melbourne – and particularly, its famed cemetery – are vividly depicted in Mark Brandi's Eden, and the novel explores gritty social and ethical problems with more intelligence and conscience than most crime fiction. Climbing in Heels Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas Corvus, $34.99 The hottest talent agency in 1980s Hollywood is about to get a shake-up. Three young secretaries are on the rise – fast-talking Valley Girl Beanie Rosen; posh and well-connected English beauty Mercedes Baxter; and Ella Gaddy, a blueblood from Kentucky – and they're determined to stake a claim in what remains solidly Mad Men territory. They'll execute a hostile takeover… or resort to tricks that make the Hollywood swamp so slimy, if that's what it takes. The tale of ambitious women in the pre-#Me Too Hollywood landscape could have been fascinating. Unfortunately, the book droops languidly in the middle, there's rather a lot of not-very-well-written sex in it, and the author seems to become sidetracked by the hedonism and corruption (and big hair) of '80s Hollywood, without advancing the plot. Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas has come up with a promising idea for a female friends and avengers narrative – the protagonists become almost the Charlie's Angels of Hollywood talent agents – but it's let down in the execution. NON-FICTION PICK OF THE WEEK The Gifts of Reading for the Next Generation Curated by Jennie Orchard Scribe, $35 'Good luck hides inside bad luck.' Novelist Nguyen Phan Que Mai knows this Vietnamese proverb to be true. When creditors came to claim her family's possessions, the only things they didn't seize were her books. During the dark time that followed, reading became her refuge. In these essays, writers reflect on the books that captured their imaginations when they were young and how they try to instil a passion for reading in the next generation. For Tristan Bancks, a storyteller for page and screen, life changed forever at the age of seven when he and some friends found Where Did I Come From? on the bookshelf. It was, they thought, 'the funniest, weirdest, most mind-boggling book on the planet.' He showed it to more friends and in this way reading became a communal and subversive pursuit. Helping kids fall under the spell of books has never been more urgent. Recent reports show reading for pleasure among children has slumped in Australia. This inspiring collection testifies to the life-changing power of books in a child's life. Plain Life. On thinking, feeling and deciding Antonia Pont NewSouth, $34.99 The word 'plain' is so wonderfully at odds with our flashy, extreme, hungry times. To live a plain life, says Antonia Pont, is to decide that your life is intrinsically 'enough'. This is not a form of low expectations or political acquiescence. If anything, it is a refusal of neoliberalism and the penetration of marketplace values into every aspect of life. As such a stance suggests, Plain Life is not a self-help book offering easily digestible rules for living. Pont's elliptical, playful, philosophical style requires readers slow down and observe the workings of their own minds, be curious about the fears they've suppressed and dare to feel them, and become aware of how they collude in their own misery. Drawing on her practice as a yoga teacher, she urges us to stay in the middle of our experience, the place where we can 'take a tiny holiday from a fixed perspective' and find a vast freedom in that. While this is not a straightforward read, the demands of Plain Life are well worth the effort. The Eagle & the Crow JM Field UQP, $24.99 This is not a book that lends itself to synopsis. In fact, it actively resists the reductive nature of such an enterprise. JM Field, a Gamilaraay man, is primarily speaking to his own people about their kinship system and how it endures in practice and in the 'libraries' held in the heads of Aunties. The system remains robust, he says because 'the architects of it, our old people, created a way of relating, and therefore organising, that colonisation could not break.' While general readers cannot expect to fathom the intricate mathematical nature of this kinship system because they are not of it and have not imbibed it through community, we are left with a better understanding of the complexity and vitality of Indigenous relations and the limits of our own world view. Field combines pithy, poetic statements with a series of essays that contrast Western approaches to knowledge as distinct disciplines 'ripped from context' and Indigenous knowledge in which kinship systems allow for 'participation in something much larger than ourselves.' As you'd expect, there are some dramatic rescue stories in this collection of tales from surf lifesavers. But it's the community, camaraderie and competition surf clubs provide that dominate these yarns. A recurring theme from club elders, many of whom remember the days of the old reel and line, is the thrill of surf-boat races, particularly the George Bass Surf Boat Marathon covering 200 kilometres along the NSW's south coast. A lifesaver from Darwin was 65 when she was asked to join a crew for the event. As she observes with laconic understatement, it was a challenge given the 'dubious ocean conditions' but 'it turned out okay'. This kind of grit is typical of these stories, along with a larrikin spirit and sense of humour. Many people, says John Baker, national president of Surf Lifesaving Australia, think 'we're just a mob of fit people hanging around the beach, wearing funny red and yellow caps', when they are, in fact, a well-trained emergency service dealing with all sorts of trauma. One of the many dissonances of the dingo story is that while Australians were happy to demonise this canine for preying on livestock, we were still ready to believe that Lindy Chamberlain, rather than a dingo, killed her baby. The dingo became an official outlaw after the passing of The Native Dogs Destruction Act in 1875, and it was said that it would be a blessing when this 'untameable brute' was made extinct. When Mark Twain came to Australia 20 years later, he saw a very different creature – 'shapely, graceful, a little wolfish but with a most friendly eye and sociable disposition.' Long before the arrival of Europeans, the dingo had a close relationship with Aboriginal people and had been incorporated into their Dreaming as a spiritual icon. In this history of the dingo, Roland Breckwoldt charts our evolving understanding of this now-threatened native animal.

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