Fiction

No one is ordinary: The Things We Never Say, by Elizabeth Strout, reviewed

9 May 2026 9:00 am

Writing about the inner lives and struggles of small-town characters, Strout reminds us that we are all battling something, even if we don’t broadcast it

They shoot horses: Boyhood, by David Keenan, reviewed

9 May 2026 9:00 am

Two young Glaswegians revenge themselves on the men who assaulted them at a nightclub by murdering one of them and killing their herd of horses

Haunting images: The Shadow of the Object, by Chloe Aridjis, reviewed

25 April 2026 9:00 am

With its eerie slides portraying the long dead, a magic lantern becomes a focus for the novel’s understated meditation on mortality

An outpouring of jaunty black comedy

25 April 2026 9:00 am

Whether reportage or dashed down diary entries, Xandra Bingley’s vivid stories seem to catch life on the wing as it flashes past at terrifying speed

A dying fall: The Last Movement, by Robert Seethaler, reviewed

18 April 2026 9:00 am

Gustav Mahler looks back on the pleasures and pains of the past from the windblown deck of SS Amerika on his final journey across the Atlantic

‘A lost generation’: My Year in Paris with Gertrude Stein, by Deborah Levy, reviewed

18 April 2026 9:00 am

Stein coined the phrase to describe the disillusioned writers and artists she mentored – but it is the woman herself who proves most elusive

Motherless friends: Kin, by Tayari Jones, reviewed

11 April 2026 9:00 am

In the Jim Crow American south, two girls are left to make their own way in life, one more successfully than the other

Singing of arms and the man: Son of Nobody, by Yann Martel, reviewed

11 April 2026 9:00 am

Fragments emerge of an epic poem describing the Trojan War from the viewpoint of an ordinary soldier, in it for the loot

Rebarbative relatives abound: The Palm House, by Gwendoline Riley, reviewed

11 April 2026 9:00 am

Even Riley’s most exasperating characters seem desperate for a quiet sanctum of their own

Tradecraft secrets: a choice of crime fiction

4 April 2026 9:00 am

Spy thrillers from James Wolff and Alex Preston reviewed. Plus: a third Rilke novel from Louise Welsh and a rediscovered classic from Duff Cooper

Looking back in anguish: Good Good Loving, by Yvvette Edwards, reviewed

4 April 2026 9:00 am

Close to death, Ellen recalls her 49-year marriage to philandering Clyde and wonders what she’s done to deserve her children’s censure

Tales of quiet intensity: The News from Dublin, by Colm Toibin, reviewed

28 March 2026 9:00 am

Familiar themes emerge in this third collection of short stories, such as neglect, bereavement and the Irish diaspora in the US

Two Tokyo misfits: Hooked, by Asako Yuzuki, reviewed

28 March 2026 9:00 am

Eriko and Shoko, both lonely 30-year-olds, have difficulty conforming to the intricate social rules ‘ensnaring’ Japanese women

James Baldwin – dogged by painful uncertainties throughout life

28 March 2026 9:00 am

Often snared in emotional turmoil, he never knew who his father was, and resisted being pigeonholed on questions of race, blame and responsibility

Dark family secrets: Repetition, by Vigdis Hjorth, reviewed

28 March 2026 9:00 am

With a haunting crime at its heart, this bitter, brief novel leaves one wondering uncomfortably whether it might be a memoir in disguise

No Hungarian rhapsody: Lázár, by Nelio Biedermann, reviewed

28 March 2026 9:00 am

A dark forest swallows up successive generations of an entitled Hungarian family in a story imbued with symbolism that spans two world wars

A sinister strangeness: City Like Water, by Dorothy Tse, reviewed

21 March 2026 9:00 am

A beloved native city is in a state of flux, slipping from normal into nightmare as freedom vanishes, time collapses and people throw themselves from rooftops

Thoughtful fantasy: Travel Light, by Naomi Mitchison, reviewed

21 March 2026 9:00 am

Borrowing from Arthuriana, Norse sagas, fairy tales and legends, Mitchison’s novel modulates midway between magic and realism

Fractured loyalties: The Tribe, by Michael Arditti, reviewed

14 March 2026 9:00 am

A powerful Jewish family flee Salonika in 1912 – only to fall apart in France on the eve of the second world war

Blockchain fantasies: My Bags Are Big, by Tibor Fischer, reviewed

14 March 2026 9:00 am

Everyone in Dubai’s confected utopia is reinventing themselves and failing miserably in this dark satire on greed, stupidity and regret

The world destroyed by madness: Howl, by Howard Jacobson, reviewed

14 March 2026 9:00 am

Apart from the atrocity of 7 October 2023 itself, it is the reaction of neighbours and even family that appals Jacobson’s protagonist in a novel that still manages to be darkly comic

Chasing happiness: The Daffodil Days, by Helen Bain, reviewed

14 March 2026 9:00 am

Leaving London with her husband and daughter to make a new home on the edge of Dartmoor, Sylvia Plath longs for ‘everything to be perfect… and hasn’t learned yet that, in life, nothing can be’

Ghastly middle-class materialism: The Quantity Theory of Morality, by Will Self, reviewed

7 March 2026 9:00 am

Self’s latest satire suggests that a world where the avaricious prosper, and the meek inherit the debts of the unscrupulous, contains a limited amount of morality

A nasty little tale about a marriage: Look What You Made Me Do, by John Lanchester, reviewed

7 March 2026 9:00 am

The life of recently widowed Kate is cast into further turmoil by a hit TV series which suggests that her husband had been having an affair with its scriptwriter

Revelling in reading: The Enchanting Lives of Others, by Can Xue, reviewed

28 February 2026 9:00 am

A group of young fiction enthusiasts and intellectuals channel their energies into devouring novels – and marvel at how enlightened it makes them feel