SARA PASCOE embraces imperfection in debut novel WEIRDO
Liberating in its honesty and refreshing in its outlook, Sara Pascoe's debut novel Weirdo reassures readers that perfection is an illusion.
Liberating in its honesty and refreshing in its outlook, Sara Pascoe's debut novel Weirdo reassures readers that perfection is an illusion.
A short story to savour, Claire Keegan's So Late In The Day is moving and intimate, despite its misogynistic narrator.
Dig into the ambitious scope of Different Times, a critical review of Britain's comedy journey from the silent movie era to today's TV.
Gary Younge’s Dispatches From The Diaspora is a collection of articles exploring the experiences of Black people over three decades with a hopeful focus on positive change.
In Old God's Time, Sebastian Barry delivers a heartbreaking novel that sheds light on institutional abuse and explores themes of grief, survival, and love.
If you’ve ever finished a book and been so invested as to continue thinking about the lives of the characters, wishing you could discover more, The Lost Girls is for you.
Bloodbath Nation is both a memoir and an examination of the social and political impact of gun ownership and violence in America, where yearly deaths from gunshots are nearly greater than traffic accidents.
Much like Adam Kay’s This Is Going To Hurt, Dean Burnett links humorous and touching personal stories with scientific knowhow in Emotional Ignorance.
What makes Hollywood: The Oral History different? Well, it’s the first of its kind to collect the recollections of a broad spectrum of those from the American industry.
As an "outsider", author of A Terrible Kindness Jo Browning Wroe was relieved that her story about the struggles of an Aberfan embalmer was well-recieved in Wales, as she tells Buzz Culture participant Gwil Williams.