Korea’s dark history is tackled in HAN KANG’s vivid, nailbiting new novel
Written in prose of extraordinary visual and sensory precision, Han Kang faces spectres of Korea’s past in a story of uncommon power and depth.
Written in prose of extraordinary visual and sensory precision, Han Kang faces spectres of Korea’s past in a story of uncommon power and depth.
Catherine Airey's debut novel, set between New York and rural Ireland, is an old-fashioned story in the very best sense of the word.
The second instalment of a Taylor Swift-inspired novel duology, You’re The Problem, It’s You is a gorgeous romance, faultlessly written, with just the right amount of spice.
Described by its author Iris Costello as “a love letter to forgotten voices", The Story Collector is a century-swapping, time-hopping historical thriller.
When a book is tipped for the Booker Prize this early in the year, the anticipation of reading it increases – and in the case of My Friends by Hisham Matar I’m inclined to agree.
First published 20 years ago, Charlotte Williams' Sugar And Slate - a wonderful memoir-cum polemic - has been republished as part of Penguin's Black British Writers series.
Join the Thursday Murder Club on another thrilling adventure in Richard Osman's The Last Devil To Die, a world of forgery, fraud, and secrets.
Join Robert Rinder on a legal journey through the world of high courts, corruption, and the quest for genuine justice in The Trial.
On Women, Susan Sontag's thought-provoking journey of womanhood, explores feminist perspectives, aging, and the connection between feminism and fascism.
Alice Winn's In Memoriam, set in a school environment as war looms over the lives of boys on the cusp of manhood, is a beautiful and life-affirming novel expertly blends poetic prose with the harsh realities of war.
Perfectly echoing the wistful, windswept landscape of its setting, The Home Scar is a quiet and bleakly beautiful book.
Book Lovers explores a tale of personal growth, grief, breaking down barriers and expectations upon women.