From Jim Crace to Cosey Fanni Tutti: recent books reviewed in short
Also featuring titles by Lawrence Osborne and Matthew Yeomans.
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Discover the best contemporary literature with the New Statesman’s expert reviews. From debut novels to short stories and literary veterans, get inspired here.
Also featuring titles by Lawrence Osborne and Matthew Yeomans.
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Marías’ masterful expression of his characters’ psychological weather, combined with Margaret Jull Costa’s gifted translation, makes for rewarding reading.
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How a bestselling debut novel about a group of murderous students became a cult classic.
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The Blue Commons by Standing, Ghost Signs by Hennigan, Milk Teeth by Andrews and The Arctic by Paterson.
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Magic and nature help children confront their fears in the best new books for young readers.
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The New Statesman’s selection of essential recent releases.
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In Either/Or, Batuman’s sequel to The Idiot, the protagonist is bewildered by the mundane and fixated on the profound.
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Lillian Fishman’s bold and searching debut novel, Acts of Service, questions the meaning of desire and introduces a major new…
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The American author’s new novel of medieval brutality aims for the Marquis de Sade but ends up closer to Shrek.
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How the author of Slow Horses and Bad Actors became the foremost living spy novelist in the English language.
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In continuing to ransack Roberto Bolaño’s sketchy drafts, his estate has reached a new, degrading low.
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The exhilarating narrative explores the complex boundaries between the natural and man-made world in rural life.
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The ghost of a more interesting narrative hovers over Elizabeth Finch, which is a novel not of ideas but of…
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A decade on, the author returns to her Booker Prize-nominated novel, and finds conflict and mortal danger among the waves.
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The New Statesman’s selection of good reads for this spring.
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In her new novel Companion Piece, Smith turns the legacy of Joyce and Woolf into vital fiction for the 21st…
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The year’s essential reading in 20 titles.
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From The Jungle Book to Z for Zachariah, New Statesman writers remember the children’s books that shaped us
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Silverview is a disappointing coda to his Cold War masterpieces.
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Beautiful World, Where Are You despairs at the shallowness of fiction – and then embraces it.
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