Dark abracadabra: the supernatural adolescents of Daisy Johnson’s Fen
Johnson's new collection of stories mixes the occult and banal to place young women at the centre of the picture.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Johnson's new collection of stories mixes the occult and banal to place young women at the centre of the picture.
ByI like my holidays chatty, boozy, and booky – the only problem is what to pack.
ByRifkind’s genteel new book, Power and Pragmatism, is a beguiling memoir.
ByD B C Pierre ponders whether writing is a teachable subject in his new book, Release the Bats: Writing Your Way Out…
ByNew books by Lyndal Roper and Diarmaid MacCulloch reveal the scatalogy and theology of one of history's best known theologians.
ByThank God Paul Morley’s The Age of Bowie doesn't try to be an objective, sensible biography.
ByHelen Lewis sees the magic in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.
ByA new book by Richard English suggests that killing can bring its own rewards.
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