Books

Jaded and adrift: I Want You to Be Happy, by Jem Calder, reviewed

6 June 2026 9:00 am

Two lonely residents of east London, well-matched in their attachment to idle dreams, make an awkward stab at a relationship

The world’s most beautiful man in a den of iniquity

6 June 2026 9:00 am

The actor Alain Delon emerges as an habitué of France’s brutal underworld in a comprehensive investigation of the 1968 Markovic Affair

Mapping the Emerald Isle: Land, by Maggie O’Farrell, reviewed

6 June 2026 9:00 am

‘Maps are acts of colonisation, enemy tools,’ says Tomás, a reluctant cartographer in 19th-century Ireland, where cruel English landowners lord it over soulful, downtrodden locals

Signs of impending doom: The Given World, by Melissa Harrison, reviewed

6 June 2026 9:00 am

When the cuckoo is no longer heard and even the last badger shuffles off, the inhabitants of Lower Eodham, a village mentioned in Domesday, sense that change can no longer be resisted

The importance of fairy tales in testing times

6 June 2026 9:00 am

The fairy tale stems from our hopeful desires, says the folklorist Jack Zipes – who sees the Land of Oz as a utopian antidote to emerging American capitalism

The Panic of 1873 seems eerily familiar

6 June 2026 9:00 am

Rapid technological change, real estate bubbles and a heavy reliance on debt helped precipitate the first Great Depression, with striking parallels to the situation today

Will robots simply bore us to extinction?

6 June 2026 9:00 am

In an attempt to relieve the drudgery of warehouse work, technology has now eliminated all need for human decision-making, Sarah O’Connor discovers

The humiliating truth about the way we think

6 June 2026 9:00 am

We overrate our capacity for rational deliberation, says Turi Munthe, when weather, soil, climate and geography are what really determine of our opinions and beliefs

Putin and Erdogan are playing with fire in the Balkans and the Caucasus

6 June 2026 9:00 am

As Russia and Turkey jostle for influence in Europe’s overlooked corners, regional tensions begin to resemble those in the build-up to the Great War

Wham! How George Michael shot to stardom straight from school

6 June 2026 9:00 am

The singer himself described his career as ‘unreal’, and admitted that one reason for cruising was the rare chance it gave him to meet ‘ordinary people’

The Battle of Cross Street: High and Low, by Amanda Craig, reviewed

6 June 2026 9:00 am

A group of writers in north London find themselves under siege in the local café as race riots erupt in a divided neighbourhood

The wonder of Nature’s ability to heal itself

6 June 2026 9:00 am

Even with minor initiatives such a reforestation and accessing lost water resources we can help Nature rebalance and avoid environmental catastrophe, says Thomas Crowther

Insufferable martinet or inspirational hero? Field Marshal Montgomery was both

6 June 2026 9:00 am

An abusive childhood may help explain the contradictory character of Britain’s great second world war commander, says Gary Mead

Portrait of an addict: Keshed, by Stu Hennigan, reviewed

30 May 2026 9:00 am

Hennigan’s doomed protagonist Sean surveys the wreckage of his past life as he drinks himself into oblivion

Reading between the lines: the power of the unsaid

30 May 2026 9:00 am

Kate McLoughlin explores the various silences in English literature – of rapture, intimacy, failure, avoidance and inarticulable grief

Caroline Aherne’s comedic genius is much missed

30 May 2026 9:00 am

No one today can unmask pomposity and self-obsession as devastatingly as Aherne did in the guise of the faux-naive Mrs Merton

How the 18th-century Panopticon inspired today’s giant distribution hubs

30 May 2026 9:00 am

The Bentham brothers’ invention is strikingly reflected in the ‘precisely engineered system of surveillance and optimisation’ at Amazon’s ‘exploitative’ fulfilment centres, says Henry Snow

Witty, lyrical and abstract: the art of Kurt Schwitters

30 May 2026 9:00 am

The German Dadaist developed his own brand of anti-rational art, transforming the junk of everyday life into vivid collages

A family affair: Love Lane, by Patrick Gale, reviewed

30 May 2026 9:00 am

Banished to the Canadian Prairies, Harry Cane lives on the land alone, except for secret nightly visits from his long-term lover and brother-in-law, Paul

The vexed relationship of Winston Churchill and George V

30 May 2026 9:00 am

The King found his minister ‘very socialistic’, and was especially outraged when Churchill, on moving to the Admiralty in 1911, suggested calling a ship HMS Oliver Cromwell

Why should it be shameful to study the Classics?

30 May 2026 9:00 am

Mary Beard offers an intelligent defence of the time-honoured subject amid calls to denounce it as a tool of racism, fascism or imperialism

The indomitable spirit of the Wigmore Hall

30 May 2026 9:00 am

Over more than a century the concert venue has hosted royalty and refugees, broken taboos, reinforced traditions and kept its doors open through two world wars and a global pandemic

The short, eventful life of George Forster – explorer, naturalist and revolutionary

30 May 2026 9:00 am

By the time he died, aged 39, the German-Polish polymath had travelled the world, mastered ten languages, witnessed the French Revolution and campaigned tirelessly for human rights

Another heroic freethinker is wiped from Russian history

23 May 2026 9:00 am

Vera Gedroits, the world’s first woman professor of surgery, inevitably fell foul of Stalin, despite supporting workers’ rights and saving hundreds of lives in the Russo-Japanese war

Macbeth in Swahili? There might even be improvements

23 May 2026 9:00 am

In his invigorating book on Shakespeare in translation, Daniel Hahn explains how in certain languages entire Shakespearean phrases can be rolled into a single word