Non-Fiction

Endnotes

The Monthly April 2009

In the April 2009 edition of The Monthly Magazine, Gail Bell investigates matters of life and death in a new essay, “Endnotes”. Drawing on her work as a pharmacist and her personal experiences, she offers an affecting and beautifully crafted meditation on the choices we make, and those we avoid, about ending our lives.

“Lena showed me her workshop notes. One sheet, ‘Preparations for Life’s Final Journey’, asked for ten or so lines on the theme If I had six months to live, I would … Followed by: If I had my life over, I would … To me, these are unbearably sad subjects. I couldn’t write a word if the exercises were given to me. I am not ready. For Lena, they are projects, goals, steps on the path … She knows that she is not tired of life. Nor is she depressed. If anything, she’s a pragmatist who has lived long enough to know that all good things must come to an end.”

Editor of The Monthly, Sally Warhaft writes: “I think it is the best thing you’ve written for us. It’s a very moving, informative and brave piece, beautifully written, and I know our readers will love it.”

Macbeth on Monday

The Monthly October 2008

In the October 2008 edition of The Monthly Magazine, Gail writes for The Nation Reviewed. Macbeth on Monday is a fond recollection of her fifteen years as part of a group that met weekly to read aloud from Shakespeare. As the group’s founder becomes ill and the meetings wind down, Gail contemplates what she is losing: a dear friend of long standing and the unique gift of regular excursions into the vital and precise language of Shakespeare’s plays– in particular the tragedy of Macbeth.

Running Dogs: The legal trade behind the manufacture of methamphetamines

The Monthly April 2008

In the April 2008 edition of The Monthly Magazine, Gail Bell explores the legal trade in cold and flu tablets which is being exploited by criminal gangs who convert pseudoephedrine into the highly lucrative street drug, methamphetamine.

Chris Feik, editor at Black Inc who publish The Monthly and The Quarterly Essay, describes the essay “Running Dogs” as “intelligent reportage, stylishly written”.

Read an excerpt of the essay here and listen to Gail’s interview with Richard Aedy on Life Matters.

Selling Sickness: How the World’s Biggest Pharmaceutical Companies are Turning us all into Patients

In the June 2005 issue of The Monthly Magazine, Gail Bell reviews a new book by Ray Moynihan and Alan Cassels. SELLING SICKNESS: How the World’s Biggest Pharmaceutical Companies are Turning us all into Patients exposes behind-the-scenes chicanery at work in major drug company dealings with the public.

Advertising experts, now embedded in the frontlines of the pharmaceutical industry, are busy “branding a condition” – like Adult ADD – where none existed before.

The Truth About Drug Companies

The Truth About Drug Companies

In a book review in The Sydney Morning Herald September 2005, Gail Bell explores the issues raised in The Truth About Drug Companies by Marcia Angell, M.D., published by Scribe.

So what is [Angell] angry about? Sub-standard clinical trials. Data manipulation. Disproportionate drug company influence in medical education. Inflated drug costs. Untrue claims about investment in research and development. An ineffectual industry watchdog (the American FDA) and a rubber stamp Patent Office that prints the licences for big pharma to make money.

Murder He Ate

New York Times

In December 2004, at the invitation of David Shipley, Op-ed editor for the New York Times, Gail Bell was invited to write an essay based on the poisoning of Viktor Yushchenko, the Ukrainian Opposition Leader. Mr Yushchenko had dined with three senior officials before he fell ill from the effects of Dioxin, a highly toxic chemical with lasting effects.

https://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/19/opinion/murder-he-ate.html?smid=em-share