
Reviewed in short: New books by Tessa Hadley, Nadia Wassef, Cradle Community and Penelope Corfield
Free Love by Hadley, Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller by Wassef, Brick by Brick: How We Build a World Without…
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
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.
Free Love by Hadley, Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller by Wassef, Brick by Brick: How We Build a World Without…
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ByThe year's essential reading in 20 titles.
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ByAllegorizings by Morris, Mothers, Fathers and Others by Hustvedt, The Anthropocene Unconscious by Bould, and The Gardener by Vickers.
ByThese Precious Days by Patchett, Break the Internet by Yallop, Muddling Through by Weldon and Falling Down by Burton-Cartledge.
ByGreek Myths by Higgins, I Live a Life Like Yours by Grue, The Library by Pettegree and der Weduwen and…
ByThe supermodel sets herself against the patriarchal norms that crush women, but fails to see how she upholds them.
ByHenry “Chips” Channon, The Diaries by Heffer, Larger than an Orange by Burns, Nina Simone's Gum by Ellis and Peaces…
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ByHow the billionaire entrepreneur and libertarian grasped the fundamental truth of capitalism.
BySilverview is a disappointing coda to his Cold War masterpieces.
ByThe morality contests of the online world and our relentless pursuit of status.
ByA century after its publication, the philosopher’s Tractatus remains as radical as ever.
ByBeautiful World, Where Are You despairs at the shallowness of fiction – and then embraces it.
ByFrom modern science to literary classics, the New Statesman rounds up ten of the best pandemic reads.
ByWhat is the link between neoliberalism and working out?
By