More from Books

The insoluble link between government and crime

2 August 2025 9:00 am

Taxes and prohibition invariably lead to evasion, racketeering and corruption in an endless capitalist cycle, says Mark Galeotti

The merchant as global reporter

2 August 2025 9:00 am

Joad Raymond Wren explores the role played by Europe’s polyglot traders in disseminating news before the invention of the telegraph

A rebellious childhood: Lowest Common Denominator, by Pirkko Saisio, reviewed

2 August 2025 9:00 am

In droll, sardonic, dialogue-driven scenes, Saisio transports us to her youth in Cold War Finland and her longing to become a writer

With glee to the silvery sea

26 July 2025 9:00 am

Before Beeching’s cuts, hordes of British holiday-makers rushed by train to the coast every summer – from ‘bracing’ Scarborough to the ‘Devon Rivera’

A summer of suspense: recent crime fiction

26 July 2025 9:00 am

The second world war features in haunting thrillers by Carlo Lucarelli and Andrew Taylor. Also reviewed: A Sting in the Tale, by Mark Ezra; and Kane, by Graham Hurley

Pity the censor: Moderation, by Elaine Castillo, reviewed

26 July 2025 9:00 am

As a content moderator of the internet, thirtysomething Girlie is accustomed to stomach-churning videos. But how will she fare in the VR theme park sector?

Tedious, lazy and pretentious – Irvine Welsh’s Men in Love is a disgrace

26 July 2025 9:00 am

Clumsy, self-regarding sequels to Trainspotting simply won’t work any more

Bristling with meaning: the language of hair in 19th-century America

26 July 2025 9:00 am

Beards, moustaches, whiskers, free-flowing curls or cropped coifs – all were signifiers of morality, trustworthiness or political ideology

Mothers’ union: The Benefactors, by Wendy Erskine, reviewed

26 July 2025 9:00 am

Three wealthy Belfast women join forces to defend their sons accused of sexual assault – regardless of rights and wrongs

A marriage of inconvenience: The Bride Stone, by Sally Gardner, reviewed

26 July 2025 9:00 am

His capricious father’s will leaves a young English doctor needing to find a wife within two days and seven hours of his return home from revolutionary France

The mixed legacy of Zbigniew Brzezinski, strategist of the Cold War

26 July 2025 9:00 am

Successful initiatives during the Carter presidency regarding the USSR, China and Afghanistan were counterbalanced by a serious misreading of the situation in Iran

Elizabeth Harrower – the greatest Australian writer you’ve never heard of

19 July 2025 9:00 am

The friend of Patrick White and Christina Stead abruptly withdrew her fifth novel in 1971 and gave up writing altogether – only now to be hailed as ‘one of the great novelists of Sydney’

The force of Typhoon Tyson, Sydney, 1954

19 July 2025 9:00 am

After receiving a bouncer from Ray Lindwall that left him temporarily unconscious, England’s fast bowler Frank Tyson swore vengeance and annihilated the Australian team – to retain the Ashes

Maoist China in microcosm: Old Kiln, by Jia Pingwa, reviewed

19 July 2025 9:00 am

Smouldering resentment flares to self-destructive violence in a remote village as the Cultural Revolution serves as a pretext for vengeance and exploitation

Hauntingly re-readable: Autocorrect, by Etgar Keret, reviewed

19 July 2025 9:00 am

Whether sci-fi vignettes, thought experiments, parables or fables, these tales of parallel universes and artificial realities are suffused by a pervasive melancholy

The shocking state of perinatal care in Britain

19 July 2025 9:00 am

Theo Clarke gathers heartbreaking instances of infant mortality, medical malpractice and severe post-partum trauma in the nation’s maternity wards

Eat your way round Paris

19 July 2025 9:00 am

Moving anticlockwise through the coil of arrondissements, Chris Newens samples the range of cuisines on offer and examines their histories

Ambition and delusion: The Director, by Daniel Kehlmann, reviewed

19 July 2025 9:00 am

Returning from Hollywood to Austria to care for his mother in 1939, the film director G.W. Pabst is seduced by ‘good scripts, high budgets and the best actors’ into working for Dr Goebbels

An unlikely alliance: Drayton and Mackenzie, by Alexander Starritt, reviewed

19 July 2025 9:00 am

Two university contemporaries with next to nothing in common find themselves working together to disrupt electricity generation with a scheme to turn tidal power into light

The enigma of Tiger Woods

19 July 2025 9:00 am

The Tiger Woods industry continues to flourish, but the man himself never now gives interviews, so any insights into his feelings are second-hand at best

The tragedy of a life not lived: Slanting Towards the Sea, by Lidija Hilje reviewed

19 July 2025 9:00 am

The story of a doomed love affair in turn-of-the-millennium Croatia aches from the start. But more haunting still are the missed opportunities that result from it

A double loss: The Möbius Strip, by Catherine Lacey, reviewed

12 July 2025 9:00 am

Lacey writes in the aftermath of two break-ups – one romantic, one religious – in a hybrid work that even she has difficulty defining

Have the Gallaghers suffered from ‘naked classism’?

12 July 2025 9:00 am

Their biographer thinks so. But if 1980s Britain had been less class-ridden, the brilliant Noel might have been drawn to further education, got a ‘good’ job and been lost to music forever

The importance of bread as a symbol of Ukrainian resistance

12 July 2025 9:00 am

Two authors writing in response to the war use baking as a prism through which to view the country’s heritage and its defiance of Putin

Collateral damage: Vulture, by Phoebe Green, reviewed

12 July 2025 9:00 am

Sarah Byrne is covering her first war, reporting from Gaza. But her pursuit of a scoop triggers a series of events that may haunt her forever