Shocking tales of murder, magic & love entwine in THE SNOW LEOPARD OF MOSCOW
The Snow Leopard Of Moscow & Other Stories isn’t a biography. But if it was, it would be one messed-up confessional.
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.
The Snow Leopard Of Moscow & Other Stories isn’t a biography. But if it was, it would be one messed-up confessional.
In The Perfect Golden Circle, an unlikely couple find themselves at the fringes of Thatcher’s Britain, drawn together by a compulsion to create intricate crop circles.
Thoughtful, passionate and sensitive to both the similarities and differences of non-domestic cultures, An Open Door is a worthwhile Welsh travel book.
Simon Goddard’s epic 10-book Bowie Odyssey series, recounting the life of perhaps the greatest pop star of his or any era against the cultural backdrop of 1970s Britain, continues with Bowie Odyssey 72.
The Visitors is one of those novels where, without being much invested in its personnel or their tribulations, you find yourself becoming subtly engrossed.
At a time when supermarket bookshelves are overflowing with self-help guides on how to become a girlboss, Gamble offers a reassuringly realistic and ferociously well-informed alternative.
In this new book, Hannah Woods handles her topic adroitly and with balance (albeit from a particularly Anglocentric perspective), presenting a fascinating depiction of Britain’s “yearning for impossible satisfaction”.
Twenty years after its initial publication, this unparalleled visual guide to the cultural phenomenon that was Ziggy Stardust has been revamped to celebrate the half-century since the Spiders From Mars crashlanded into British living rooms.
Colourfully presented, with an eloquent and imaginative foreword from Michael Sheen, The Mab is a concise and accessible collection of the stories of the medieval Mabinogion.
Touted as “collaborative fiction” and an “experiment”, Natasha Soobramanien and Luke Williams' post-colonial quasi-novel Diego Garcia is wilfully disjointed.
Despite a shift of focus feeling a little unsatisfying, the righteous anger in Jessica Moor’s MeToo-inspired novel Young Women rings out.
The War For Gloria is a huge, occasionally heartbreaking story by Atticus Lish about a young man forced to come of age before his time. And with more focus, Lish could have written a classic.
Inspired by a scandalous truth that unfolded in author Leila Mottley’s hometown of Oakland, Nightcrawling takes you along for a gruelling ride in a city full of injustices and failures.
A rather grand anniversary edition of Jim Marshall’s photobook The Rolling Stones 1972 – updated to include contact sheets, enhanced photos - has been released to mark their 60th anniversary.
Carlos Manuel Àlvarez has smuggled an important ethnographic work inside the form of an entertaining and well-written crónica.
An author attempting to write a biography about forgotten Scottish poet Thomas Pringle forms the subject for Zoë Wicomb’s novel.
Fox: Neighbour Villain Icon takes a deep dive into the life of the red fox, with essays by natural history experts and other academics.
Book Lovers explores a tale of personal growth, grief, breaking down barriers and expectations upon women.
James Lacey's photos of decaying buildings in A World In Ruins serve as a form of preservation in the face of demolition.
Zen koans, true spellcasters, new visions of reality, transmutations of the everyday and, in one case, a lot of cow talk. It's all in Mab Jones' monthly poetry column.
Valérie Perrin’s Three – translated from French by Hildegarde Serle – is a gripping and epic story about a trio of friends.
Set over the course of a single day in Dublin, acclaimed essayist Emilie Pine’s debut novel tells the separate, overlapping stories of its eponymous characters.
Beautifully bound in a thick, matt-textured hardback, Rivers Of Wales is a delight to hold as well as read, with extremely high production values.
Pre-pop pop, as chronicled in Let's Do It, is a story of systemic racism, sexism and necessarily concealed sexuality - basically all of the last century’s entertainment industry.