Fiction

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

Double trouble: As If, by Isabel Waidner, reviewed

21 February 2026 9:00 am

Two near-identical middle-aged men, adrift and purposeless, are revitalised when they spontaneously decide to swap lives

Adventures in the City of Light: Rousseau’s Lost Children, by Gavin McCrea, reviewed

21 February 2026 9:00 am

An academic specialising in Jean-Jacques Rousseau slips back in time to 1777 to accompany his hero on long philosophical rambles around Paris

Blitz spirits: Nonesuch, by Francis Spufford, reviewed

21 February 2026 9:00 am

Set in war-torn London, this fantastical novel featuring shape-shifting angels, parallel universes and a homicidal female fascist deserves to be a colossal success

No good deed goes unpunished: A Better Life, by Lionel Shriver, reviewed

14 February 2026 9:00 am

Kind, liberal Gloria Bonaventura opens her New York home to a young Honduran woman, but soon comes to regret the decision

Lust for gold: White River Crossing, by Ian McGuire, reviewed

7 February 2026 9:00 am

In 1766, a small party from the Hudson Bay Company head to the subarctic tundra in search of untold riches

Musical bumps: Discord, by Jeremy Cooper, reviewed

7 February 2026 9:00 am

The ebb and flow of harmony between a composer and her chosen solo saxophonist is charted with meticulous precision

Dark days in Kolkata: A Guardian and a Thief, by Megha Majumdar, reviewed

31 January 2026 9:00 am

As the city descends into chaos and starvation, a ‘manager madam’ and desperate intruder clash in their efforts to keep their respective families alive

Horror in Victorian Hampstead: Mrs Pearcey, by Lottie Moggach, reviewed

31 January 2026 9:00 am

A fledgling female journalist fights hard to exonerate an impoverished woman accused of double murder

Sabotage in occupied France: The Shock of the Light, by Lori Inglis Hill, reviewed

31 January 2026 9:00 am

Having joined SOE at the outbreak of war, young Tessa faces immense dangers, not all of which she can overcome

A poignant study of female attachment: Chosen Family, by Madeleine Gray, reviewed

31 January 2026 9:00 am

This Sydney-based novel explores friendship, love, betrayal and the highs and lows of parenthood

A commentary on the grim present: Glyph, by Ali Smith, reviewed

31 January 2026 9:00 am

Smith seems to urge us to pay close attention to the horrors of today’s world. But can such a spectacularly plotless novel convey any meaningful message?

A satirical masterpiece: Blinding, by Mircea Cartarescu, reviewed

24 January 2026 9:00 am

Bucharest is transformed into a phantasmic playground in this surreal take on Romania’s horrific recent history

Time for a reckoning: Vigil, by George Saunders, reviewed

24 January 2026 9:00 am

A mega-rich oil magnate is offered a last-minute opportunity for repentance in this Christmas Carol for our times, targeting corporate greed and consumerism

A flying visit: Palaver, by Bryan Washington, reviewed

24 January 2026 9:00 am

A mother travels impulsively from Texas to Tokyo to spend time with her estranged son when she hears an unfamiliar catch in his voice over the phone

An intellectual farce: Rapture of the Deep, by Robert Irwin, reviewed

24 January 2026 9:00 am

Quantum physics, time travel, chaos theory and religious speculation all find a place in this ideas-rich romp about a lonely scientist studying ‘nitrogen narcosis’

The serious business of games: Seven, by Joanna Kavenna, reviewed

17 January 2026 9:00 am

A young philosopher goes in search of the curator of the Society of Lost Things and the once world-famous game of Seven whose rules no one seems to know

Bookshop blues: Service, by John Tottenham, reviewed

17 January 2026 9:00 am

An aspiring novelist working the evening shift in an LA bookstore is forced to listen to endless chat about works he knows in his heart to be terrible – or, worse, fears might be good

From riches to rags: The Effingers, by Gabriele Tergit, reviewed

17 January 2026 9:00 am

Beginning in 1878, this family saga charts the success of two Jewish brothers in Berlin before the coming of the Nazis threatens not only their livelihoods but their lives