
Reviewed in short: New titles from Alison Colwell, Felipe Fernández-Armesto, Warsan Shire and Richard Mainwaring
No Excuses by Colwell, Straits by Fernández-Armesto, Bless the Daughter Raised By a Voice In Her Head by Shire and…
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Read all the latest book reviews from the New Statesman and discover the best novels, non-fiction, essays and biographies. If you’re looking for something more specific, explore our sections dedicated to politics books and history books.
No Excuses by Colwell, Straits by Fernández-Armesto, Bless the Daughter Raised By a Voice In Her Head by Shire and…
ByTwo new self-help books, Block, Delete, Move On and Losing It, seek to educate us about society’s sexual dysfunctions.
ByDanny Orbach’s intriguing book Fugitives details how former Third Reich officers sold their services to the West – and turned…
ByYoung Mungo by Stuart, The Barefoot Woman by Mukasonga, Made in China by Qu and In the Shadow of St…
ByFor a literary oracle, the novelist is not too interested in what lies ahead.
ByParadais by Melchor, Magic in Merlin's Realm by Young, Homesickness by Barrett and Get Rich or Lie Trying by Brown.
ByThe author reveals how the way we recover from disaster goes to the heart of what it means to be…
ByLosing Afghanistan by Brivati, French Braid by Tyler, A Line Above the Sky by Mort and Out of Touch by…
ByChinese fiction is booming, but authors cannot escape the regime’s tightening grip.
ByThe Shame Machine by O'Neil, The Trouble With Happiness and Other Stories by Ditlevsen, Here Again Now by Nzelu and…
ByOliver Bullough’s Butler to the World shows how the UK’s enthusiasm for deregulation has made it a global haven for…
ByCLR James: A Life Beyond the Boundaries by Williams, Recitatif by Morrison, Moon Witch, Spider King by James and Wivenhoe…
ByThis broad, ambitious book skilfully skewers everyday sexism, but Penny's feminist uprising underestimates those they wish to save.
ByHow Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley and Iris Murdoch transformed philosophy for a postwar world.
ByInvisible Child follows Dasani Coates and her family in New York as they battle a racist system that is rigged…
ByTwo books explore how exercise has been shaped by science, culture and the quest for autonomy. But does keeping fit…
ByThe Right to Repair by Perzanowski, The Instant by Liptrot, Distant Fathers by Jarre, and Wreck by De Freston.
ByWorn by Thanhauser, Cold Enough for Snow by Au, A Terrible Kindness by Wroe and The Global Merchants by Sassoon.
ByThe metaverse promises infinite new realms just as tangible as the one we will leave behind.
ByVegans makes meat-eaters aware of their hypocrisy, argues Ed Winters in This is Vegan Propaganda – and people hate them for…
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