Fiction

An unconventional orphan: Queen Esther, by John Irving, reviewed

29 November 2025 9:00 am

At the heart of this vast, sweeping novel is a solitary, determined heroine, who – Jane Eyre-like – is a moral force unbound by conventionalities

Alice in Nightmareland: The Matchbox Girl, by Alice Jolly, reviewed

29 November 2025 9:00 am

A mute 12-year-old girl is invited to Dr Asperger’s clinic in 1930s Vienna – but how will ‘idiot’ children fare once the Nazis come to power?

A Faustian pact: The School of Night, by Karl Ove Knausgaard, reviewed

22 November 2025 9:00 am

In Knausgaard’s latest psychological thriller, Kristian Hadeland, an arrogant Norwegian photography student, is implicated in a crime for which there will be harsh consequences

A philosophical quest: A Fictional Inquiry, by Daniele del Giudice, reviewed

22 November 2025 9:00 am

The pacing and tone are noirish in this metaphysical detective story, set in Trieste, about the space between writing and life

A satirical portrait of village life: Love Divine, by Ysenda Maxtone Graham, reviewed

15 November 2025 9:00 am

Within a bourgeois Church of England milieu of round-robins and parish chit-chat lurk rumours of sabotage and clandestine love affairs

Bernard Cornwell: ‘I don’t believe in writer’s block’

1 November 2025 9:00 am

They say never meet your heroes, but Bernard Cornwell didn’t disappoint. Knowing I’m a superfan, the events team at The…

Farewell to Lyra: The Rose Field, by Philip Pullman, reviewed

25 October 2025 9:00 am

In the final volume of The Book of Dust, Pan’s quest for Lyra’s lost imagination takes him east into another universe, while Lyra heads the same way looking for her daemon

Trouble in Tbilisi: The Lack of Light, by Nino Haratischwili, reviewed

25 October 2025 9:00 am

Romance and family feuding Romeo and Juliet-style but on opioids unfold in 1990s Georgia, as civil war rages amid the power cuts

A literary Russian doll: The Tower, by Thea Lenarduzzi, reviewed

11 October 2025 9:00 am

The closer we get to the mystery of Annie, a 19th-century consumptive locked up in a tower by her wealthy father, the more we are lost in other stories within stories

An unheroic hero: Ginster, by Siegfried Kracauer, reviewed

4 October 2025 9:00 am

When Kracauer’s protagonist is finally conscripted in the first world war, he starves himself to ‘general physical debility’ and is sent to ‘peel potatoes against the foe’

Honeymoon from hell: Venetian Vespers, by John Banville, reviewed

27 September 2025 9:00 am

A fin-de-siècle hack marries the daughter of wealthy oil baron but soon begins to wonder what he’s let himself in for

A portrait of alienation: The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny, by Kiran Desai, reviewed

20 September 2025 9:00 am

Two lovers from wealthy families in Allahabad contend with powerful forces of ambition, corruption, neighbouring feuds and sexual violence

The short, restless life of Robert Louis Stevenson

20 September 2025 9:00 am

The frail but hugely successful writer broke away from his Presbyterian roots to pursue a life of travel before finally settling with his wife in remote Samoa

Whitehall farce: Clown Town, by Mick Herron, reviewed

6 September 2025 9:00 am

The implication of a senior government figure in murky dealings during the Troubles presents new problems for Jackson Lamb and his Slow Horses

Hell is other academics: Katabasis, by R.F. Kuang, reviewed

6 September 2025 9:00 am

A postgraduate student of ‘Analytic Magick’ must rescue the soul of her thesis supervisor from campus hell or risk being stuck in academic limbo on Earth

Lives upended: TonyInterruptor, by Nicola Barker, reviewed

23 August 2025 9:09 am

At an improvised jazz performance a man interrupts a trumpet solo asking: ‘Is this honest?’ The incident goes viral, prompting much comic argument about abstractions

An ill wind: Helm, by Sarah Hall, reviewed

23 August 2025 9:09 am

Hall’s protagonist in this extraordinary novel is Britain’s only named wind, a ferocious, mischievous beast that has been hitting Cumbria’s Eden Vale from time immemorial

A summer romance: Six Weeks by the Sea, by Paula Byrne, reviewed

23 August 2025 9:09 am

Byrne imagines the twentysomething Jane Austen, on holiday in Sidmouth, falling for the lawyer Samuel Rose – a perfect foil, being a cross between Mr Darcy and Mr Knightley

Culture clash: Sympathy Tokyo Tower, by Rie Qudan, reviewed

16 August 2025 9:00 am

Social, moral, architectural and linguistic problems collide in this gem of a novel set in lightly altered contemporary Tokyo

Campus antics: Seduction Theory, by Emily Adrian, reviewed

16 August 2025 9:00 am

Two creative writing professors in a ‘deeply rewarding’ marriage separately decide to press the self-destruct button

A precocious protagonist: Vera, or Faith, by Gary Shteyngart, reviewed

9 August 2025 9:00 am

No wonder clever ten-year old Vera is suffering intense anxiety in Manhattan, what with problems at school, her birth mother vanishing and the wider American world in turmoil

Madcap antics: The Pentecost Papers, by Ferdinand Mount, reviewed

2 August 2025 9:00 am

Hapless Dickie Pentecost is drawn into a consortium involved in short-selling scams disguised as environmental activism in the Amazon

Looking on in anger: Happiness and Love, by Zoe Dubno, reviewed

2 August 2025 9:00 am

A nameless woman, joining former friends after a funeral, is left speechless with fury at their vanity and pretensions

An explosion of toxic masculinity: The Fathers, by John Niven, reviewed

2 August 2025 9:00 am

The lives of two men who meet in a Glasgow maternity unit soon spiral out of control, exposing heartbreaking vulnerabilities, in this wry portrait of modern fatherhood

A summer of suspense: recent crime fiction

26 July 2025 9:00 am

The second world war features in haunting thrillers by Carlo Lucarelli and Andrew Taylor. Also reviewed: A Sting in the Tale, by Mark Ezra; and Kane, by Graham Hurley