Fiction

A grandmother’s twisted mind: The Passage of Roses, by Tie Ning, reviewed

20 June 2026 9:00 am

An ambitious, controlling matriarch will do anything to curry favour during the Cultural Revolution – even to the extent of deliberately harming her vulnerable young granddaughter

No fairytale: The Children, by Melissa Albert, reviewed

20 June 2026 9:00 am

What caused the devastating house fire that killed a bestselling children’s author, leaving her son and daughter – the stars of her books – suddenly orphaned?

Vigilante justice: Pure Men, by Mohamed Mbougar Sarr, reviewed

20 June 2026 9:00 am

The grotesque posthumous lynching of a homosexual by a frenzied mob prompts Sarr’s protagonist to investigate the shadow world of gay life in Senegal

French letters – Albert Camus’s great epistolary love affair

20 June 2026 9:00 am

To read the 15-year correspondence between Camus and the actress Maria Casarès is to experience a vertiginous roller-coaster between transcendent joy and abject suffering

Nothing works: The End of Everything, by John M. Harrison, reviewed

13 June 2026 9:00 am

Set in ‘one of the well-known seasonal waterside art towns of Kent’, Harrison’s novel is both a bracing vision of environmental collapse and a post-Brexit cri de coeur

Tuscan escapades: Villa Coco, by Andrew Sean Greer, reviewed

13 June 2026 9:00 am

An American archivist, hired to catalogue an elderly baronessa’s antiques, finds himself drawn into increasingly absurd adventures in the Italian countryside

The agonies of an abandoned wife: Mrs Dickens, by Emily Howes, reviewed

13 June 2026 9:00 am

Charles Dickens is cast as a cruel, coercive controller, accusing the mother of his ten children of idleness and stupidity before discarding her for a younger woman

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

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 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

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

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

Love and loneliness in the Outer Hebrides: John of John, by Douglas Stuart, reviewed

16 May 2026 9:00 am

Summoned home to his dying grandmother in Harris, a gay young man is treated with both violence and tenderness by his father, a Calvinist precentor with a guilty secret

The good old bad old days: Prestige Drama, by Seamas O’Reilly, reviewed

16 May 2026 9:00 am

Set in 1980s Derry, O’Reilly’s novel vividly captures the rifts and festering resentments within a close-knit community during the Troubles

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