WU-TANG legend RAEKWON reflects on career highlights – and lowlights – in new memoir
In his new memoir, Raekwon openly valorises himself for his achievements but is equally willing to lay his mistakes bare.
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.
In his new memoir, Raekwon openly valorises himself for his achievements but is equally willing to lay his mistakes bare.
A thoroughly thought-provoking and enjoyable read, The Blue Book of Nebo provides a rich tale that’s perfect for both YA and adult readers.
Stephen King, Mark Lanegan, Bernadine Evaristo and more make up our author picks for the best books we read and loved in 2021.
2021 has welcomed some real crackers into the literary universe and Megan Thomas has picked out one from every month of the year to see you into 2022.
Compiled by Michael O'Brien over 30 years, The Dossier rips into 14 regional examples of misscarriages of justice in Wales.
In a decade often viewed through orange and brown-tinted glasses, Painting The Beauty Queens Orange refutes the idea of a beige tapestry of women’s lives.
Each story in Catalogue of a Private Life by Libyan author Najwa Bin Shatwan navigates a topic that feels resonant with our understanding of worldwide worries.
There is a bleak and brutal beauty to the poetry that occupies many of Devil in a Coma's pages from songwriter Mark Lanegan.
Francisco De La Mora’s Diego Rivera guides us through the tumultuous life of this famed Mexican artist but stuggles to hold attention.
With The Wife of Willesden, Zadie Smith puts her own modern spin on Chaucer, while remaining true to his original text.
Edited by Lenny Henry and Marcus Ryder, Black British Lives Matter adds up to a timely, eye-opening and empowering read.
Josep Maria Esquirol seems to make a deliberate effort to write as convolutedly as possible in The Intimate Resistance.
The Runes Have Been Cast is another strong offering from Robert Irwin in which the snobbery ends up being scarier than the supernatural.
The Village finds David Wilson depart from images of the Pembrokeshire landscape with which he’s made his name and focuses instead on people.
You’ve Got Red On You delves into every aspect of the making of cult classic zom-rom-com: Shaun of the Dead.
An immense tale set in 18th century Poland, Olga Tokarczuk’s The Books Of Jacob is historical fiction at its finest.
Laurie Woolever has lovingly put together a tribute to Anthony Bourdain, Bourdain: In Stories, from those who loved him the most.
Popularised on Instagram, Kate Baer's 'erasure' poetry in I Hope This Finds You Well creates beauty out of bitterness.
The Missing Pieces of Mum is a testament to Sally Herbert’s determination to find out who her grandmother really was.
The disparate strands of Somebody Loves You from Mona Arshi make for a strong debut that never quite soars.
Mab Jones spotlights romantic reading from Adam Horovitz and conversational offerings from John Freeman in November's new poetry column.
Evocative and full of boundless passion for his subject, Lenny Kaye compacts rock'n'roll's most transformative moments into Lightning Striking.
Brother to Paul, Mike McCartney's Early Liverpool chronicles the city's music scene in the 50s and 60s - including, naturally, The Beatles.
With the modern world such an unholy mess Robin McLean catapults us back to the Wild West in Pity the Beast.