Lauren Owen’s gothic folklore casts gripping spell in SMALL ANGELS
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.
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.
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.
Brittle With Relics’ author Richard King’s chronicling of Welsh oral history has been 10 years in the making. Luckily, he tells Adam England, it’s all been worth it.
Karla Brading speaks to first-time YA novelist Louise Finch who addresses teen-boy toxicity and the perils of time travel with The Eternal Return Of Clara Hart.
In Clare Mackintosh's The Last Party, we find ourselves on the Wales/England border – under Pen y Ddraig mountain – on the morning after a raucous NYE party.
Welsh Food Stories, Carwyn Graves (Calon/University Of Wales Press) Price: £14.99. Info: here words JONATHAN SWAIN
Delphi is the debut novel from Clare Pollard, which reflects on the last two years through the COVID pandemic.
Boulder by Eva Baltasar is billed as part of “a triptych that aims to explore the universes of three different women in the first person."
A galaxy of stars make an appearance in Behind Closed Doors - including a hilarious encounter involving David Niven and Ian Fleming that will leave Bond fans shaken (not stirred).
From The Presence And The Dream to The Horse And The Girl, Mab Jones' rings in a year of her monthly poetry column for July.
A Working-Class Family Ages Badly is Juno Roche’s first memoir, set against the present-day backdrop of their home in rural Spain.
To Fill A Yellow House, British-Ghanian writer Sussie Anie’s debut novel, is a tale of modern London living set around two characters.
In Takeaway, Angela Hui details family life serving Chinese food in the Lucky Star in Beddau, a Rhondda village.
Alison is a graphic novel that tells and illustrates the life and development of Alison Porter, from bored housewife to conflicted model to respected artist.
In Am I Normal?, Sarah Chaney explores what is normal and how it came to be recognised as such while stressing it's not always been this way.
Highlighting themes of gender, love and family, the raw experiences of Sarmiento Park sex workers are described in graphic, unflinching detail by Camila Sosa Villada.
After the success of Russell T Davies’ It’s A Sin and the outpouring of love for Jill Baxter, it was only a matter of time before the ‘real’ Jill, upon whom Baxter was based, shared her story.
The past interweaves with the future in The Incandescent Threads, a sublime novel from Richard Zimler, and the fifth book in the Sephardic Cycle series.