Congratulations to the Australian Women’s History Network Editorial Collective for the publication of Lilith: A Feminist History Journal Number 27. This year’s Lilith covers a rich variety of topics in feminist history, including: the role of place and space in feminist and lesbian identity-making in 1970s’ Melbourne; a decolonising approach to writing the history of women and children in Alice Springs; the importance of recipe exchange in kinship networks in seventeenth-century Ireland; an examination of the life of twentieth-century poet’s muse Katie Anna Lush; the political theatre employed by the Australian Women’s Movement Against Socialism in the 1940s; the targeting of wine advertisements at Australian women in the 1950s and 1960s; and an exploration of the processes of power within natural history societies in nineteenth-century South Australia. There are also two articles that form a special section on the topic of the female frame, one on the role of uniforms for women workers in the transport industry, and the other comparing archetypes of the infanticidal mother in fin-de-siècle Australia and France. Contributors include Kate Davison, Alison Vincent, Sharyn Clarke, Jacquelyn Baker, Iva Glisic, Samantha Owen, Michelle Bootcov, Leek Sulkowska, Saskia Roberts, Emma Robertson and Lee-Ann Monk.