Books

AI, a near miss, and a pleasing history

13 December 2025 9:00 am

My pick of the books of 2025

Songs of murder, rape and desertion

13 December 2025 9:00 am

Amy Jeffs rediscovers the disturbing beauty of traditional ballads

The evasions of smalltown Alabama: The Land of Sweet Forever, by Harper Lee, reviewed

13 December 2025 9:00 am

Apprentice stories contain much of the raw material for To Kill a Mockingbird, as Lee tries to reconcile love for home with disgust at its prejudices

Rory Stewart’s romantic view of Cumbria is wide of the mark

13 December 2025 9:00 am

The former MP for Penrith and the Border prefers to ignore the depleted uplands and poisoned lakes as he rhapsodises about the landscape’s ‘improbable beauty’

Peril in Prague: The Secret of Secrets, by Dan Brown, reviewed

13 December 2025 9:00 am

Robert Langdon is pursued by dark forces through labyrinthine alleys as he searches for his abducted girlfriend, who is about to crack the secret of human consciousness

Cosy crime for Christmas: a choice of thrillers

13 December 2025 9:00 am

Recent titles reviewed are: The Christmas Clue, by Nicola Upson; Benbecula, by Graeme Macrae Burnet; and Blood Rival, by Jake Arnott

The little imps who pretended to be poltergeists

13 December 2025 9:00 am

While investigating paranormal activity in postwar Britain, Tony Cornell found mischievous, attention-seeking children to be responsible for some of the more sensational ‘disturbances’

The cartographer’s power to decide the fate of millions

13 December 2025 9:00 am

Late one August night in a Pentagon office in 1945, a line scrawled in pencil on a map of the Korean peninsula led to the creation of two countries that are still at war today

The ups and downs of high-rise living

13 December 2025 9:00 am

In Britain’s postwar tower blocks, modern amenities and breathtaking views left some residents ecstatic, while others risked disaster at the likes of Canning Town’s Ronan Point

Spot the play title

13 December 2025 9:00 am

How many can you spot? For answers, click here Got something to add? Join the discussion and comment below.

How London became the best place in the world to eat out

13 December 2025 9:00 am

Atmosphere can be as important as food – and no one knows this better than the capital’s visionary restaurateur Jeremy King, who raises front-of-house to an art form

Football vs opera, and the terror of being considered highbrow

13 December 2025 9:00 am

Opera was hugely popular in Victorian Britain, but subsidies have doomed it to charges of ‘foreign elitism’ – as opposed to a ‘national passion, like football’

‘This sweet, delightful book’: The Natural History of Selborne revisited

13 December 2025 9:00 am

Quiet days in his garden listening to birdsong and counting his cucumbers gave Gilbert White enough material for one of the most enduring classics of all time

The extraordinary courage of Germany’s wartime ‘traitors’

13 December 2025 9:00 am

With Nazi informers everywhere, any dissident risked betrayal – and the prospect of being hanged ‘like slaughtered cattle’ for ‘defeatism’

The young Anton Chekhov searches for his voice

6 December 2025 9:00 am

In Chekhov’s first stories, rooted in the provincial Russia of the early 1880s, we see various plots and characters take shape that will emerge fully formed in later works

Nostalgia for the 1980s New Romantic scene

6 December 2025 9:00 am

Robert Elms recalls the glory days of London’s Blitz Club, where the likes of John Galliano, Boy George and David Bowie danced in outlandish costumes to futuristic electronica

Revenge of the invisible woman: Other People’s Fun, by Harriet Lane, reviewed

6 December 2025 9:00 am

Things turn nasty when lonely Ruth finds herself taken advantage of once too often by selfish, glamorous Sookie, a faux friend from distant schooldays

The last straw in Lloyd George’s cash for honours scandal

6 December 2025 9:00 am

A peerage for the Randlord Sir Joseph Robinson, convicted of fraud, caused such an outcry in 1922 that even Lloyd George realised it was a step too far

The nearest we’ll ever get to experiencing the horrors of 1914

6 December 2025 9:00 am

Robert Cowley’s agonising account of the bloody struggle for Ypres and the stalemate on the Western Front transports us to the very heart of the action

Homage to the herring as king of the fishes

6 December 2025 9:00 am

A fascinating compendium of herring-related stories includes the attempted poisoning of St Patrick, the message contained in a Van Gogh still life and the superstitions of Manx mariners

Pride and Prejudice retold in a thousand different ways

6 December 2025 9:00 am

Some of the stranger reimaginings involve dragons, zombies, Lydia Bennet as a witch, Lizzy ending up with Charlotte Lucas and the story narrated by Anne de Bourgh

What not to say when visiting Santa’s grotto, and other tips from Ben Schott

6 December 2025 9:00 am

Also discussed in the latest miscellany are classic Italian gesticulations, the nuances of graffiti, the hierarchy of Venetian gondoliers and how to deter paparazzi

How Hans Holbein brought portraiture to England

6 December 2025 9:00 am

Before Holbein’s arrival in 1526, painting in England tended to be religious in nature. But that soon changed when his portraits spread like an exquisite virus through the country’s elites

John Updike’s letters overflow with lust, ambition, guilt and shame

6 December 2025 9:00 am

‘Affairs are cruel, and if they are sin, they carry the punishment with them’, he wrote to one of the many women he cheated on throughout a long life

Jessica was the only Mitford worth taking seriously

29 November 2025 9:00 am

But her unfailing humour does help lighten a solid new biography that focuses on her tireless campaign for social justice