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Marina Lewycka, British-Ukrainian author, dies aged 79

The writer, who was born in a refugee camp in Germany after the war, won the Wodehouse prize for comic writing for her debut A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian

‘A girl of genius’: archives unsealed of Amy Levy, queer Jewish writer admired by Oscar Wilde

Levy’s work was ‘ahead of her time’ and speaks to current debate around feminism, LGBTQ+ literature and Jewish identity, say researchers

The Silver Book by Olivia Laing review – a thin line of beauty

The world of 1970s Italian cinema is the glossy backdrop for an elegantly wrought but shallow novel

King Sorrow by Joe Hill review – dragon-fired horror epic is a tour de force

This sprawling tale of college kids who summon evil with lifelong consequences is a fantastic read

Hilary Mantel story imagining Margaret Thatcher’s assassination to be staged in Liverpool

Short story set in 1983, and published a year after the former prime minister’s death, considers ‘what happens when people feel they don’t have a voice’ says director John Young

Should I care what Sarah Jessica Parker thinks about books?

She swept all before her at the Booker prize ceremony, but I’m running out of patience with celebrity influence in publishing, says Guardian columnist Emma Brockes

Loren Ipsum by Andrew Gallix review – chronically funny satire of the literary scene

Full of word games, in-jokes and grisly murders, this debut pours gleeful scorn on the pretensions of contemporary literary life

‘It’s notoriously hard to write about sex’: David Szalay on Flesh, his astounding Booker prize-winner

The novel’s protagonist is violent, libidinous and so inarticulate he says ‘OK’ some 500 times. So how did the author turn his story into a tragic masterpiece?

Vaim by Jon Fosse review – the Nobel laureate performs a strange miracle

In the Norwegian master’s latest example of ‘mystical realism’, one man makes a dreamlike, hypnotic voyage through life

The risky strategy of Booker winner Flesh pays off

The protagonist’s inner life is hidden from the reader in this highly original novel

David Szalay wins 2025 Booker prize for ‘dark’ Flesh

The judges ‘had never read anything quite like it’, says panel chair Roddy Doyle, announcing the Hungarian-British author’s novel as the winner of the £50,000 award

Andrew Miller is bookies’ favourite to win 2025 Booker prize

The Land in Winter has shortest odds of victory, ahead of Kiran Desai’s The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny

Love The Traitors and Only Murders in the Building? Visit The Mousetrap, says bold new director of West End perennial

Ola Ince, who has refreshed Agatha Christie’s record-breaking mystery, suggests ‘we all fancy ourselves as detectives’

Readers reply: Who is the most evil villain in fiction?

The long-running series in which readers answer other readers’ questions on subjects ranging from trivial flights of fancy to profound scientific and philosophical concepts

In Love With Love by Ella Risbridger review – a sexy celebration of romantic fiction

From Pride and Prejudice to Fifty Shades, a writer’s paean to the literature of desire

Post navigation

← Older posts
  • Wuthering Heights: bold new trailer for Emerald Fennell’s epic adaptation
  • Wuthering Heights: bold new trailer for Emerald Fennell’s epic adaptation
  • Blurred lines: how Michael Wolff aspired to be part of elite circles he wrote about
  • Blurred lines: how Michael Wolff aspired to be part of elite circles he wrote about
  • Feminist History for Every Day of the Year by Kate Mosse review – the women who helped change the world
  • Marina Lewycka, British-Ukrainian author, dies aged 79
  • Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution review – spectacular if baffling anime is out to thrill and bewilder
  • ‘A girl of genius’: archives unsealed of Amy Levy, queer Jewish writer admired by Oscar Wilde
  • Gasp-worthy, clunky, a moral problem? Critics react to The Hunger Games: On Stage
  • The Silver Book by Olivia Laing review – a thin line of beauty
  • King Sorrow by Joe Hill review – dragon-fired horror epic is a tour de force
  • Hilary Mantel story imagining Margaret Thatcher’s assassination to be staged in Liverpool
  • The Hunger Games: On Stage review – thundering fight to the death in a dazzling dystopia
  • Christmas Karma review – Dickens adaptation has as much Yuletide spirit as a dead rat in the eggnog
  • Should I care what Sarah Jessica Parker thinks about books?
  • ‘Every account is slightly different’: who were the real Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday?
  • Adele to make acting debut in star-studded Tom Ford movie
  • Loren Ipsum by Andrew Gallix review – chronically funny satire of the literary scene
  • We Did OK, Kid: A Memoir by Anthony Hopkins review – a legend with a temper
  • The Running Man review – Glen Powell sprints through fun update of Stephen King future-shock sci-fi satire
  • ‘It’s notoriously hard to write about sex’: David Szalay on Flesh, his astounding Booker prize-winner
  • Jilly Cooper died of head injury suffered in fall at home, inquest hears
  • One Aladdin Two Lamps by Jeanette Winterson review – freewheeling reflections on life, art and AI
  • The Secret Santa Project review – festive romcom tries for the Love Actually style multiple story strands
  • Vaim by Jon Fosse review – the Nobel laureate performs a strange miracle
  • The risky strategy of Booker winner Flesh pays off
  • David Szalay wins 2025 Booker prize for ‘dark’ Flesh
  • Andrew Miller is bookies’ favourite to win 2025 Booker prize
  • Poem of the week: Leaves by Frederic Manning
  • 100 Meters review – mesmerising anime of young athletes in search of physical and spiritual high

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