Books

A.C. Benson enters the pantheon of great English diarists

14 June 2025 9:00 am

The intimate of writers, politicians and royalty, Benson confined his waspish anecdotes to journals kept over a period of 40 years, now available in a magnificent two-volume edition

Admirable in their awfulness – the siblings Gus and Gwen John

14 June 2025 9:00 am

The self-styled Gypsy King and his reclusive sister seemed polar opposites – but both painters were selfish, obsessive monsters, according to Judith Mackrell

Edge of your seat

7 June 2025 9:00 am

Great news for admirers of entertaining and refreshingly honest thinking and writing about our world: a bonus volume by the…

A searching question: Heartwood, by Amity Gaige, reviewed

7 June 2025 9:00 am

Can the mysterious disappearance of a hiker on the Appalachian Trail be linked to a Department of Defense training facility in backwoods Maine?

Church teaching on homosexuality can be revised

7 June 2025 9:00 am

Lamorna Ash devotes much space to interviewing gay Christians seared by homophobia, but neglects scripture’s underlying message about the link between sex and loving commitment

Nunc est bidendum – to Horace, the lusty rebel

7 June 2025 9:00 am

Peter Stothard’s portrait of an ambitious young Lothario running wild and refusing to knuckle down is certainly not the Horace we know from Latin lessons

An ill wind: Poppyland, by D.J. Taylor, reviewed

7 June 2025 9:00 am

Norfolk life looks quietly bleak in these carefully worked short stories of broken homes, precarious employment, dwindling expectations and torpor

With many despairing academics packing it in, who will solve the problem of the universities?

7 June 2025 9:00 am

Something is seriously amiss when such a courageous and independent-minded professor as Matt Goodwin feels he no longer belongs in the system

No place is safe: The Brittle Age, by Donatella di Pietrantonio, reviewed

7 June 2025 9:00 am

When her daughter, a student in Milan, is left traumatised after being mugged, Lucia is reminded of her own violent introduction to adulthood at a similar ‘brittle age’

Remembering Hiroshima 80 years on

7 June 2025 9:00 am

Iain MacGregor’s impeccably researched account of the first use of nuclear weapons in war is a timely reminder of the horrors they unleash on the world

Everyone who was anyone in Russia was spied on – including Stalin

7 June 2025 9:00 am

In 1972,Vasili Mitrokhin oversaw the transfer of thousands of documents in the KGB archives and secretly noted the atrocities they revealed - though Stalin’s file was mysteriously empty

What Mark Twain owed to Charles Dickens

7 June 2025 9:00 am

It wasn’t just Dickens’s stage performances and publishing ventures that fascinated Twain, but the witty, journalistic style, which he mimicked to great effect in early travel books

Charles Darwin’s contribution to Patagonia’s grim history

7 June 2025 9:00 am

Characterising native tribes as ‘naked, painted, shivering, hideous savages’ proved no less calamitous for their survival as Argentina’s efforts to exterminate them, says Matthew Carr

The all-seeing AI

31 May 2025 9:00 am

Artificial intelligence has overturned many of the old rules, and the one about ‘seeing is believing’ was perhaps the first…

Repetitive strain: On the Calculation of Volume, Books I and II, by Solvej Balle, reviewed

31 May 2025 9:00 am

In an astonishing multi-volume novel where the unthinkable becomes entirely credible, Tara Selter, an antiquarian bookseller, finds herself trapped in one remorselessly recurring November day

Douglas Cooper – a complex character with a passion for Cubism

31 May 2025 9:00 am

Prone to paranoia and tantrums, the critic and collector made many enemies, but his firsthand knowledge of Léger, Picasso and Braque also won the admiration of art historians

How the US military became world experts on the environment

31 May 2025 9:00 am

In its bid to become a global superpower, the US vastly increased its number of overseas bases in the 1960s, giving it unparalleled knowledge of Earth’s most extreme habitats

‘Sitting the 11-plus was the most momentous event of my life’ – Geoff Dyer

31 May 2025 9:00 am

‘Everything else that has happened couldn’t have happened were it not for that’, says Dyer, in a funny, moving account of growing up in postwar England

‘Poor devils’: the hopeful scribblers of the French Revolution

31 May 2025 9:00 am

Buoyed by visions of immortality, Parisian hacks were ready to ‘explode’ in revolutionary fervour, but those who didn’t perish in the Terror would often struggle to make a living

Time travellers’ tales: The Book of Records, by Madeleine Thien, reviewed

31 May 2025 9:00 am

Sheltering from a flood in a labyrinthine ‘nothing place’, Lina opens a secret door to neighbouring rooms – where she finds three revered historical figures whose life stories she shares

Why going nuclear is humanity’s only hope

31 May 2025 9:00 am

Powering a rising world population up to a decent standard of living is something only nuclear reactors can do – and it’s mad to think otherwise, argues Tim Gregory

It seemed like the end of days: the eerie wasteland of 14th-century Europe

31 May 2025 9:00 am

The Black Death combined with the Hundred Years’ War left the Continent a desolate world, full of terror and foreboding

‘I secreted a venom which spurted out indiscriminately’ – Muriel Spark

31 May 2025 9:00 am

Frances Wilson’s mesmerising biography of one of the past century’s most singular writers is especially enlightening on the ‘domestic savagery’ often required of a great artist

The novel that makes Ulysses look positively inviting: The Aesthetics of Resistance, by Philip Weiss, reviewed

24 May 2025 9:00 am

Weiss’s meandering, 1,000-page magnum opus may be the least entertaining fiction ever written – though no one reads such a work for laughs

Thomas More’s courage is an inspiration for all time

24 May 2025 9:00 am

His willingness to stand firm and speak truth to power is an important lesson for us all, says Joanne Paul – who draws many parallels between Henry VIII and today’s autocrats