A mother leaves everything behind in CATHY SWEENEY’s BREAKDOWN, a ‘story no one wants to hear’
In Breakdown, Irish novelist Cathy Sweeney opens the door to marriage and motherhood in the modern world and how it can affect a woman.
In Breakdown, Irish novelist Cathy Sweeney opens the door to marriage and motherhood in the modern world and how it can affect a woman.
Within memoir The Ballad Of Speedball Baby’s pages, author Ali Smith navigates a dirty, drug-fuelled Lower East Side Manhattan.
A collection of city-based short stories in Welsh, Porth is the first fiction for adults from author Luned Aaron, and a variety of life experiences are portrayed within.
Discover the vibrant narrative of Ainslie Hogarth's Normal Women, a novel transcending motherhood to explore deeper societal questions.
If you’re looking for a rewarding read for the start of 2024, look no further than Confrontations by Simone Atangana Bekono.
Room/Ystafell/Phòng is a remarkable anthology that intertwines the diverse experiences of queer lives in Wales and Vietnam.
Old detectives, and one gothic author, are given new leases of life in James Patterson’s latest novel Holmes, Margaret And Poe.
Step into Michele Mari's world as newly translated novel Verdigris takes you on a journey through 1969 Milan - a blend of spy-comic intrigue and psycho-gothic horror.
Tom’s Version, Robert Irwin's 10th novel, talks of edgy things – from abusive relationships to narcotics and sexual power games – but with a jovial, almost cosy air.
Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite and Natalie Thomlinson, authors of Women And The Miners’ Strike 1984–1985, suggest the strike's political, social and cultural impact has been overstated, especially concerning women.
Seimon Williams does not hold back in Welsh Rugby: What Went Wrong?, a brutal account of the demise of Welsh rugby in modern times.
Best known for one of his latter films, Pier Paolo Pasolini always ruffled feathers. Theorem, a tie-in novel to his 1968 film, makes the latter more digestible.