JUDAS PRIEST frontman waxes BIBLICAL about metal, LAST OF THE SUMMER WINE… and pickled eggs
Biblical’s content more closely resembles a memoir than what it purports to be, “a bible of hard rock and heavy metal”.
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.
Biblical’s content more closely resembles a memoir than what it purports to be, “a bible of hard rock and heavy metal”.
If good fiction is meant to hold up a mirror to society, then Saunders smashes the mirror and lets you find yourself in the pieces.
Hans Luijten’s pivotal new exploration of Jo van Gogh-Bonger's life in The Woman Who Made Vincent Famous aims to rewrite part of Van Gogh's history.
Mab Jones kicks this October’s poetry instalment off by recommending a multimedia installation, before reverting to the paper and ink combo we know and love.
List-making king of 90s male fiction Nick Hornby is back with an extended essay on two of his favourite people: Charles Dickens and Prince.
Vampire Cinema: The First Hundred Years functions as both a sweeping primer for the freshly bitten and illuminating biography of the creatures of the night for long-time fans.
The term ‘Psychogeographer’ doesn’t really suit Terminal Zones, but it’s got plenty of geography, and psychosis.
Kid Congo Powers closes Some New Kind Of Kick almost exactly 25 years before its publication, on the day he did heroin for the last time.
The follow-up to Richard Herring's Talking Cock, Can I Have My Ball Back? is an honest, moving, funny book about the most serious of subjects.
The story of Carlotta sometimes resembles a retelling of The Odyssey, from the contemporary perspective of a Black, trans and formerly incarcerated person.
A captivating collection of poetry, Pearl & Bone’s first four poems arise from Mari Ellis Dunning’s pregnancy.
Jan Morris was adamant no one should write her biography during her lifetime, and following her death in 2020 Paul Clements has stepped into the breach.
McLean's latest collection of short stories, Get ‘Em Young, Treat ‘Em Tough, Tell ‘Em Nothing, is a complex, and sometimes perplexing, study into liminal spaces.
For feminist pop culture historians or what have become quotable camp classics, Crazy Old Ladies is an easy-to-read, fascinating account of an overlooked trope.
On finishing Maybe We’ll Make It, Margo Price's memoir, I felt like I’d been listening to the reminiscences of a friend.
At 20 years old, Sugar And Slate still speaks to us in these modern times, helping to ensure marginal voices remain heard.
Few music autobiographies unearth the behind-the-board secrets and tales like Trevor Horn’s recent memoir, Adventures In Modern Recording.
Move over Richard Osman, there’s a new celebrity author in town! Actor Paterson Joseph’s debut novel is The Secret Diaries Of Charles Ignatius Sancho.
Over three decades on from Pop Will Eat Itself telling us so, it’s still fair to say that Alan Moore knows the score.
Award-winning poet, writer, and creative facilitator Taylor Edmonds releases her debut poetry pamphlet Back Teeth, an exploration of the transition from girlhood to womanhood.
A Home Of One’s Own powerfully critiques the systemic cycles in the housing market whilst defending the right for everybody to have a home.
A moving, personal account, Pacemaker is a story of hope and for the desire to keep going.
With all the hallmarks of a classic Enid Blyton adventure combined with an Edgar Allen Poe, The Green Man Of Eshwood Hall delivers ample scares supernatural peril.
Although modern stories, the context set in Cree represents a Wales we all grew up in.