Soil, sisterhood & survival: journalist Alice Vincent explains WHY WOMEN GROW
A glorious, sweet-scented joy of a read, Why Women Grow is the literary equivalent of a stroll through a cornflower meadow on a warm summer’s evening.
A glorious, sweet-scented joy of a read, Why Women Grow is the literary equivalent of a stroll through a cornflower meadow on a warm summer’s evening.
Perfectly echoing the wistful, windswept landscape of its setting, The Home Scar is a quiet and bleakly beautiful book.
People who struggled to make it through Veganuary may want to look away now as Chloe Sorvino’s Raw Deal is enough to put you off chicken nuggets for life.
What unfolds in Seaside Towns is a compelling love triangle between two men and the lure of the past.
Who hasn’t dreamed of packing it all in and setting off on an adventure? Julie Brominicks made that fantasy a rare reality by undertaking an epic walk around The Edge Of Cymru.
Compelling and unsettling in equal measure, Idol, Burning is a pitch-perfect insight into how confusing and exhausting modern life can feel to young women today.
Trying to cram over a thousand years’ worth of philosophy into a 250-page book is no mean feat, but Zabus and Nicoby do just that in Sophie's World.
McLean's latest collection of short stories, Get ‘Em Young, Treat ‘Em Tough, Tell ‘Em Nothing, is a complex, and sometimes perplexing, study into liminal spaces.
Move over Richard Osman, there’s a new celebrity author in town! Actor Paterson Joseph’s debut novel is The Secret Diaries Of Charles Ignatius Sancho.
The Passengers is an intimate and incredibly relatable look at what drives, moves and worries us as both individuals and a species.
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).
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.