Camilla Grudova crafts hazy underworld of damaged oddballs in debut novel CHILDREN OF PARADISE
Camilla Grudova's debut novel Children Of Paradise is set in an ancient, crumbling cinema with a shambolic cast.
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Camilla Grudova's debut novel Children Of Paradise is set in an ancient, crumbling cinema with a shambolic cast.
The 10 mini-biographies collected in Sound Within Sound provide a mind-expanding selection that challenges the reader to enlighten themselves.
At the core of Thrust are themes of immigration, climate change and feminism – all wrapped up in an intelligently affecting story that successfully walks the fine line between topical issues, history and science fiction.
There wasn’t one laugh in Some Sort Of Twilight, for me; rather, there was the familiarity that comes from solidly drawn sketches of the everyday.
Lydia Conklin’s debut book Rainbow Rainbow boldly thrusts you into a collection of prize-winning queer and trans stories.
The premise of this Kidnap Fury Of The Smoking Lovers may not seem unique – scorned husband, younger lover, wantaway wife – however, the plot features a wealth of drama, complex characters and extreme situations.
Some may dismiss it as a better-written Fifty Shades, but Acts Of Service is an intelligent, fearless exploration of the blurred lines between consent and coercion.
Writer, speaker and campaigner Natasha Devon explores unlikely friendships, social media obsession, poor mental health and more in her latest YA book, Toxic. Karla Brading grabbed some words with the tireless wordsmith.
Belle Greene depicts someone who, for good or ill, chose to determine their own fate, despite the boundaries set in place by those who held all the power.
Colonialism and the devastating way its impacts echo down the ages are explored in Sophie Buchaillard’s new novel, This Is Not Who We Are.
Still Born, Guadalupe Nettel’s fourth novel, is a moving, nuanced exploration of motherhood and the complexity of the maternal instinct.
Bad Eminence is a madcap study in biting irony, featuring a deliciously sardonic sense of humour. But the book does loses its way somewhat.
This posthumously published memoir about Llanelli-born Fleet Stree photographer John Downing plunges the reader into the cut and thrust of life on the front line.
Ellis Cashmore asks the difficult questions – can and should we separate the art from the artist? And, most uncomfortably, are we responsible for Michael Jackson’s destruction if we, as consumers, aided in his creation?
My Life In The Sunshine is evocative when describing connective-tissue life events like preteen Nabil’s Kiss fandom and his high school punk covers band, but strongest when sifting through his experience as a mixed-race person in America.
Featuring engrossing art and photographs that only aid in the voluminous research and peculiar chronicle, this intellectual book will leave you with abundant food for thought and no doubt provoke ample discussion.
During the 1970s, music journalism was a male-dominated arena, but Chicago-born Barbara Charone broke through the barriers.
From Peter Finch to poems written in the Swansea dialect, Mab Jones finds much to celebrate on the home front, poetry-wise, this June.
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.