Lionel Shriver’s new novel creates a whole world – but can’t quite grasp its inhabitants
Like Shriver's previous offerings, The Mandibles: a Family – 2029-2047 takes on a difficult topic: this time, American debt.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Like Shriver's previous offerings, The Mandibles: a Family – 2029-2047 takes on a difficult topic: this time, American debt.
ByNot the Chilcot Report by Peter Oborne reveals how Blair exagerrated evidence from the intelligence services to parliament – and the…
ByIn 2015, more people landed in Greece in a single month than the whole EU has agreed to share over…
ByPorcelain: a Memoir swerves around the tired tropes of most rock stories in a joyfully honest look at his life in the…
ByTranslated fiction is not a genre. It is illogical and unhelpful to suggest otherwise.
ByDespite its "zany" title, Thatcher Stole My Trousers is a provocative and original look back at Sayle's life.
ByRichard III was innocent, Mary I was hard done by, and it really wasn't fair that they shot Anastasia.
ByThe Hidden Histories podcast.
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