Stephen King casts yet another unforgettable spell in FAIRY TALE
With King’s world-building leaving little breadcrumbs to the ultimate gingerbread house of plot wonderment, Fairy Tale soars.
Whether it's paperback, hardback or audio, we’ve got it covered when it comes to all the best new writers, authors and book releases.
With King’s world-building leaving little breadcrumbs to the ultimate gingerbread house of plot wonderment, Fairy Tale soars.
If ever there was a book to offer a loving hand of support to those who struggle to muster words in public, Anne-Marie Conway’s How To Be More Hedgehog has succeeded.
Written by Ioan Morris and illustrated by Josh Hicks, Orig: The Fearless Life Of Orig Williams tells the wild and adventurous story of Wales’ first professional wrestling icon.
Under strict lockdown constraints in 2020, Peter Finch took the opportunity to exploit the border restrictions in place and walk the boundary of Cardiff.
James Rice’s second novel Walk showcases a tense, yet playful writing style that will appeal to fans of 90s-era Irvine Welsh.
As more and more writers try to break away from the conventional form of the novel, Quin was already doing it, and better, 50 years ago.
Re-Sisters is enjoyably nonlinear – springing sharply from discussion of one figure to another, in doing so bundling up the various commonalities in their lives
It’s understandable to see why the author is described as one of Basque literature’s leading contemporary writers and has a host of national awards to her name.
Themes of home, sanctuary, belonging and uprising pervade Mab Jones’ chosen poetry picks this August.
The closer we come to the crux of the family’s dysfunction, the more Ghost Town hurts.
The eighth instalment in a series featuring detective Jane Tennison, the prolific Lynda La Plante’s latest Dark Rooms is an absorbing read.
Zain Khalid’s assured debut novel, Brother Alive, is an impressive feat of literary ambition and intellectual heft.
Far more than just a lazy slab of nostalgia, Amstrads And Ataris is a precise record of a billion-pound industry’s humble and somewhat innocent beginnings.
Bob Dylan And Dylan Thomas: The Two Dylans is an illuminating comparison of two literary legends is a true work of love and dedication by Jeff Towns and KG Miles.
Originally published in 2013, When My Brother Was An Aztec serves to remind us of Natalie Diaz’s singular talent.
The relationship between animals and humans is explored in The Dolphin House, a fictionalised account based on a real-life experiment on the island of St. Thomas in 1965.
Small Angels is a tale of heartache, revenge and the dark side of human nature, wrapped up in unsettled scores that have left their mark.
A concise and powerful novel from twice Booker-shortlisted author Mohsin Hamid, The Last White Man offers a unique premise, continuing on from the success of his previous novels.
Bonsai is a novel about love and literature, and about love being expressed through the shared experience of literature.
Intended as a “record of resistance”, Land Of Change offers up a plethora of voices and views, with some central themes and threads being those of injustice, power, and politics.
Intellectual, accessible, and stylishly bound, Nuar Alsadir's Animal Joy is another clever, meaty, unpatronising book from Fitzcarraldo Editions.
The Passengers is an intimate and incredibly relatable look at what drives, moves and worries us as both individuals and a species.
A magnificent debut short story collection from Omer Friedlander, The Man Who Sold Air In The Holy Land is just one of the many intriguing titles featured herein.
Travis Alabanza's book is both an empowering and enriching read for those that are treated like outsiders on this confusing and cluttered planet.