More from Books

Adrift in strange lands: The Accidentals, by Guadalupe Nettel, reviewed

26 April 2025 9:00 am

A sense of unease runs through Nettel’s latest short stories as the protagonists start to lose their bearings in increasingly unfamiliar scenarios

Friends fall out in the English civil war

26 April 2025 9:00 am

Bulstrode Whitelocke and Edward Hyde, close colleagues in the 1630s, find themselves on opposite sides in the bitter conflict a decade later

The benign republic of Julian Barnes

26 April 2025 9:00 am

The novelist presents his utopia – of unilateral disarmament and the public ownership of transport – in the tone of a thoughtful vicar giving an anodyne sermon somewhere in the Home Counties

The road trip from hell: Elegy, Southwest, by Madeleine Watts, reviewed

26 April 2025 9:00 am

Watts skilfully conjures a sense of impending doom as a young couple’s expedition to the American Southwest is threatened by deadly fires sweeping through California

The story of food in glorious technicolour

26 April 2025 9:00 am

Jenny Linford explores the global history of cooking and eating through specific items from the British Museum spanning recorded history

Is there ever a good time to discuss the care of the elderly?

19 April 2025 9:00 am

The young are too busy enjoying themselves, the middle-aged are loath to initiate it and the elderly themselves can’t always take part, but it’s a subject sorely in need of public discourse

Only Hitler could have brought the disparate Allies together

19 April 2025 9:00 am

Their collaboration was riven by secret deals and betrayals, with Roosevelt suspicious of Churchill and Stalin suspicious of everyone, but all purporting to be great friends

Dangerous games of cat and mouse: a choice of crime fiction

19 April 2025 9:00 am

A sadistic octogenarian meets her match in a malevolent eight-year-old at a Luxor hotel. Thrillers by Christopher Bollen, Henry Wise, Charlotte Philby and Cristina Rivera Garza reviewed

The boy who would be king: The Pretender, by Jo Harkin, reviewed

19 April 2025 9:00 am

A magnificent imagining of the life of Lambert Simnel traces his progress from farm boy to coronation in Dublin to turnspit in the Tudor palace kitchens to plans of dark revenge

The mystical masterpiece from Stalag VIII-A

19 April 2025 9:00 am

A meditation on Quartet for the End of Time, Oliver Messiaen’s great prison camp composition, should bring the strange, bird-fixated religious avant-gardist new admirers

Why we never tire of tales of pointless polar hardship

19 April 2025 9:00 am

Out in the middle of nowhere, our heroes and anti-heroes are stripped down to essentials and the quest for knowledge becomes a quest for self-knowledge and human improvement

Christianity in England is dying – and our national identity with it

19 April 2025 9:00 am

The self, not society, has begun to matter most to people, with the collective life threatened by ragged bands of individualists lacking a sense of history and burdened by the mere present

The pain of being a Bangle – despite sunshine through the rain

19 April 2025 9:00 am

The more successful the female rock band became, the unhappier they seemed, with in-fighting and ‘suicidal thoughts’ leading to break up shortly after their greatest hit

Magnetic and manipulative – the enigma of Gala Dali

19 April 2025 9:00 am

Countless people apparently found her fascinating, but apart from being shrewd, scary, intelligent and very beady about money, it’s hard to see why

What did John Lennon, Jacques Cousteau, Simon Wiesenthal and Freddie Mercury have in common?

12 April 2025 9:00 am

They were all stamp collectors, and feature among Robert Irwin’s oddball fraternity caught up in a collecting mania spanning centuries

A gruesome bohemian upbringing: Days of Light, by Megan Hunter, reviewed

12 April 2025 9:00 am

With clear parallels to Angelica Bell at Charleston, young Ivy believes herself a constant disappointment to her family of avant-garde writers and artists

‘I felt offended on behalf of my breasts’ – Jean Hannah Edelstein

12 April 2025 9:00 am

When misguided well-wishers suggest to Edelstein, post-mastectomy, that she might now have ‘the breasts of her dreams’, she wants to reply that those had always been her own

Marriage, motherhood and money: Show Don’t Tell, by Curtis Sittenfeld, reviewed

12 April 2025 9:00 am

Funny, smart stories explore the ‘stale’ married state, the anxieties of parenthood and the sweet-sour nature of female friendship. But do they go far enough?

The great explorers of the past dismissed as mercenary opportunists

12 April 2025 9:00 am

Simon Park follows the current trend of accusing Columbus, Magellan, Da Gama and other famous navigators of seeking personal enrichment above all else

Vindictive to the last: a Nazi atrocity in Tuscany

12 April 2025 9:00 am

Even in retreat in August 1944, a German posse carried out a particularly brutal triple murder at a hillside farm outside Florence in a vendetta against the Einstein family

The psychiatrist obsessed with ‘reprogramming’ minds

12 April 2025 9:00 am

William Sargant’s controversial treatments of troubled young women in the 1960s included prolonged induced comas, ECT and, in extreme cases, lobotomies

Urban gothic: I Want to Go Home, But I’m Already There, by Roisin Lanigan, reviewed

12 April 2025 9:00 am

A rented London flat starts to exude hostility and malevolence – or could our impressionable heroine just be imagining it?

Petty, malicious and tremendous fun – the Facebook office drama

12 April 2025 9:00 am

Sarah Wynn-Williams’s gleeful dissections of former colleagues’ foibles were met with furious denials and the threat of legal action – guaranteeing maximum publicity for her book

The Pinochet affair: the pursuit of a Chilean dictator

5 April 2025 9:00 am

A fast and compelling account of what happened when the retired general came to London in the late 1990s for an operation, by a lawyer closely involved in the case

The Da Vinci world of known unknowns

5 April 2025 9:00 am

Was Leonardo really vegetarian, agnostic and a fashion icon? In this searingly brilliant new ‘anti-biography’ we learn there isn’t much we can say about him with any certainty at all