Books

Three remarkable sisters at the heart of 20th-century Chinese politics

12 October 2019 9:00 am

In their lifetime, and afterwards, the Soong sisters from Shanghai seemed like figures from a Chinese fairy tale. There were…

David Cameron’s For the Record ends where the sorriest three years in modern British history begins

12 October 2019 9:00 am

It’s fun to look for what’s missing in a memoir; the forgotten egos, the policy howlers buried for posterity. Some…

A work of art in more ways than one

12 October 2019 9:00 am

Neil Hegarty’s new novel, The Jewel, is a mass of contradictions. It’s about an art heist, but it’s not fun.…

Living on a nuclear submarine does your head in

12 October 2019 9:00 am

Richard Humphreys spent a good part of five years, between the ages of 18 and 23, living inside a nuclear…

Oswald of Northumbria – an Anglo-Saxon saint-king of the north for our time

12 October 2019 9:00 am

In Hamlet a gravedigger asks the riddle: ‘What is he that builds stronger than either the mason, the shipwright, or…

Gilgamesh, Michael Schmidt’s ‘life’ of a poem

12 October 2019 9:00 am

In the mid-19th century, around lunchtime, a pale young man with an enormous beard could be seen in the British…

A thought-provoking work of ‘moral atonement’ and ‘comparative redemption’

12 October 2019 9:00 am

No nation’s defeat is ever quite straight-forward, and sometimes downfall can bring its own kind of posthumous victory. By the…

Betrayal in Berlin – a small but important part of the Cold War story

12 October 2019 9:00 am

The Berlin Tunnel was an Anglo-American eavesdropping operation mounted against Russian-controlled East Berlin in 1955–56.  It was a technical and…

Donald Hoffman’s The Case Against Reality is a hard to get your head around

12 October 2019 9:00 am

Vibrations, chemicals and light-waves exist in the world; sounds, tastes, smells and colours only seem to. ‘Many sensations which are…

Patti Smith had a bad year in 2016

12 October 2019 9:00 am

In the Chinese zodiac, 2016 was the year of the monkey, a trickster year full of the unhappy and the…

Man’s first instinct has always been to return to the sea

5 October 2019 9:00 am

Travelling the Indus valley late in the third millennium BC you would have been awed by two Bronze Age megacities,…

Ian McEwan’s anti-Brexit satire is a damp squib

5 October 2019 9:00 am

Kafka wrote a novella, The Metamorphosis, about a man who finds himself transformed into a beetle. Now Ian McEwan has…

Where are Yeats, Eliot and Plath in a new survey of 20th-century poetry?

5 October 2019 9:00 am

Shelley famously and optimistically proclaimed that poets were the unacknowledged legislators of the world. Adorno famously and pessimistically declared that…

Jessie Burton’s The Confession is, frankly, a bit heavy-handed

5 October 2019 9:00 am

Jessie Burton is famous for her million-copy bestselling debut novel The Miniaturist, which she followed with The Muse. Now she’s…

Is the judiciary really so bad at judging character?

5 October 2019 9:00 am

When I had a cough last week, my son Joe,  who has autism, shouted at me and covered his ears.…

Visiting the world’s masterpieces is a quixotic undertaking

5 October 2019 9:00 am

From his base in London, Martin Gayford has spent much of his career as an art critic travelling. He has…

A frank description of dementia is a searing, suffocating read

5 October 2019 9:00 am

In Annie Ernaux’s The Years — her extraordinary act of collective autobiography —the ‘I’ disappears. Her memoir becomes the memoir…

A dog’s life is infinitely superior to our own — so let’s embrace it

5 October 2019 9:00 am

The Dominican friar Henry Suso was once carving Jesus’s name in his chest with a knife when he noticed a…

Ann Patchett’s The Dutch House is even better on second reading

5 October 2019 9:00 am

Having a saint in the family is dreadful, They’re often absent, either literally or emotionally, and because they’re always thinking…

A ménage à trois that worked: Ivan Turgenev and the Viardots

5 October 2019 9:00 am

If we still bemoan a world of mass tourism, the mid 19th century, Orlando Figes reminds us, is where it…

Round North Korea with Michael Palin in rose-tinted spectacles

5 October 2019 9:00 am

Michael Palin in North Korea, a two-part documentary in which the Python is given a tightly choreographed tour of that…

It’s easy to forget how undemocratic Europe was 50 years ago

5 October 2019 9:00 am

The subtitle of Simon Reid-Henry’s substantial work indicates its thesis: ‘The remaking of the West since the Cold War, 1971–2017.’…

As Lyra grows up, Philip Pullman’s materials grow darker

5 October 2019 9:00 am

Two years after Philip Pullman published La Belle Sauvage, the prequel to His Dark Materials trilogy, we have its long-awaited…

Why have the Swedes been incapable of finding Olof Palme’s murderer?

5 October 2019 9:00 am

Any Swede old enough to remember knows where they were when their prime minister Olof Palme was assassinated. On 28…

Do Jews think differently?

5 October 2019 9:00 am

Sixteen years into a stop-go production saga, I got a call from the director of The Song of Names with…