Sally Herbert searches for THE MISSING PIECES OF MUM in tale of hopeful resilience
The Missing Pieces of Mum is a testament to Sally Herbert’s determination to find out who her grandmother really was.
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 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.
A true master storyteller, and a loss to the world of literature. Silverview is an enthralling and inspiring tale from John le Carre.
Skylark from Alice O'Keefe is a thought-provoking, well-researched saga of worlds colliding and lives that will never be the same.
The crash ball king who ruled the middle of the Welsh rugby field for nine years, Jamie Roberts doesn't hold back in Centre Stage.
Chouette, from Claire Oshetsky, uses strange subject matter to question our assumptions about parenthood and children.
1984: The Graphic Novel adds new depth to Geore Orwell's book, proving the 62-year-old classic is indeed timeless.
Witty, realistic, thought-provoking, and mysterious, How To Survive The Madhouse teaches you what not to do in a Welsh forensic hospital.
Hailed as "the patron saint of poetry," Roger McGough is on fine form in his latest fantastic collection, Safety In Numbers.
Bar 44's Tom Morgan and his brother Owen always wanted to do a recipe book, but as he tells Laura Fedeli, Tapas Y Copas is much more than that.
A series of personal testimonies which stand witness to ‘everyday sexism,’ Kim Moore's All The Men I Never Married is sharp, searing and honest.
Renowned naturalist Jane Goodall admits that “we are going through hard times,” but The Book of Hope invites us to do just that.
Inventive, poetic, energetic, uncomfortable and uncompromising, Dark Neighbourhood marks the arrival of a singular talent.
A collection of short stories from Penelope Lively, Metamorphosis offers brilliant observations of the human experience and relationships.
Jan Morris- writer, traveller, first-hand witness to history, and all-around global citizen - reflects on a lifetime of meaning in Allegorizings.
A highly rich and entertaining read, Chronicles From the Land of the Happiest People on Earth deals with power, politics and the media.
Courttia Newland's Cosmogramma is an excellent collection of short stories illustrated via animalistic observations of humanity.
Uršuľa Kovalyk's The Equestrienne is a YA story about a young girl finding her passion on the backdrop of communist Czechoslovakia.
Sammy Wright's book Fit casts a grim but absorbing view into young, contemporary Britain with mixed levels of detail.
The title of Elisa Victoria's Oldladyvoice has a double meaning - walking a tightrope between 'good' and 'bad' kinds of weird.