More from Books
Weeping and laughter
Mrs Yi is a folk healer in a remote Chinese village where the living commune with the dead and rocks relay warning messages
Making waves
Lily Le Brun explores our shifting relationship with the shoreline through works by Vanessa Bell, Paul Nash, Bridget Riley and other modernists
Deadlier than the male
There are hard-hitting thrillers from Margie Orford and Rijula Das – as well as an engaging mystery by Erri de Luca
A kingdom of the mind
When an Irish shipbuilder’s son was crowned king of a Caribbean rock in 1880, few would have guessed how long this eccentric monarchy would last
Order, meaning and beauty
Witold Rybczynski’s majestic survey takes us from Brittany in 4,800 BC to Bilbao’s Guggenheim Museum, designed by Frank Gehry
The might of night
Moving stealthily through starlit fields and woods, John Lewis-Stempel marvels at nature’s many dark mysteries
Comfort in austerity
There’s advice on pressure cooking and butter-making, plus simple recipes for family meals, Mediterranean vegan dishes and south Asian specialities
Ghosts of Rwanda
The veteran journalist Fergal Keane describes the horror of witnessing atrocities worldwide – and his mystifying compulsion to return for more
A man to fake dying for
Donna Freed finally learns the truth about her biological parents, whose insurance fraud in 1960s America resembled the plot of Double Indemnity
Bent coppers
Tom Harper exposes deep-grained criminality at the Met, including actively assisting violent offenders and stealing thousands from the public purse
The luck of the devil
Lenin and Mussolini were chief among 20th-century leaders who owed their initial success purely to chance, says Ian Kershaw
Dashed dreams
Twin brothers sponsor a radical building programme in postwar Britain – but the collapse of a tower block raises questions of conscience and accountability
Our very own treasure island
The vast majority of significant finds are now unearthed by amateurs – including the Nebra Sky Disc, the centrepiece of the British Museum’s recent Stonehenge exhibition
A nagging sense of loss
Even if notions of beauty are treacherously fugitive, and even if interpretations of history are nowadays subject to revision by…
Going to ground
Do you ever think about the ground beneath your feet? I do. Having read a number of popular science books…
A monument to ornithology
The text of this well illustrated book is mostly John James Audubon’s, from journals unpublished in his lifetime. Part I…
Wacky words and ideas
The standard complaint of anyone doing a Christmas gift books guide is that the books aren’t up to much. I…
A prison within a prison
Nowhere in this extraordinary prison memoir do we find out why Fatos Lubonja was sentenced to imprisonment in Spaç, the…
Via sacra
This profound and emotion-laden book ends, as did the first world war, in hope, and no little catharsis. It begins,…
The frustrations of a society painter
At Tate Britain this year, for the first time since 1926, nine of John Singer Sargent’s brilliantly painted and affectionately…
A portrait artist of rare skill
Novels about art are often strange, vain affairs. After all, writing about artists, especially fictional ones, can seem like a…
An Argentinian nightmare
‘In Argentina,’ Mariana Enriquez writes in Our Share of Night, ‘they toss bodies at you.’ It is an arresting, chilling…
Conquest and carnage
It is hard to imagine why anyone should want to write one, but if there has to be a history…
France à la Russe
Fleeing the revolution and forced to scrape a living as taxi drivers and seamstresses, the exiles were generally a melancholy crowd, united by mutual loathing
‘I can see myself in others’
Greil Marcus chooses seven celebrated songs, ranging from the 1960s to the present, to explore the diverse sources of Dylan’s inspiration