OurDailyRead

Our Daily Read – Book News, Reviews & Comment

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Fiction
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Under 7s
  • 8-12yr
  • Teen
  • Education
  • Graphic
  • Art
  • Crime
  • Poetry
  • History
  • Bio
  • Obituary

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

‘We’ve become distrustful of each other’: Braiding Sweetgrass author Robin Wall Kimmerer on Trump, rural America and resistance

Her last book sold 2m copies. Now the Native American ecologist is taking on capitalism. She talks about how the ‘gift economy’ could heal divisions across the US

Peter Carey on Jack Maggs and snubbing the Queen: ‘I thought she was a relic’

As the stage version of his take on Great Expectations opens in Adelaide, the novelist looks back at a right royal kerfuffle – and a memorable encounter with a London cabby

‘I’m so not an astronaut!’ Samantha Harvey on her Booker-winning space novel – and the anxiety that drove it

She won the top prize with a time-distorted novel set on the International Space Station. Yet, the writer reveals, Orbital is actually ‘a celebration of Earth’s beauty with a pang of loss’ – fuelled by her anxiety-induced insomnia

The exile of Mosab Abu Toha: how a Gazan poet was forced to flee his home

His house was bombed and his relatives killed, before he escaped to the US. Now he is on a relentless, restless drive to tell the stories of all those left behind

Granta publisher Sigrid Rausing: ‘Working while grieving was consoling’

The editor and author on completing the memoir by her late friend, Swedish writer Johanna Ekström, where she stands on the assisted dying bill and what she’s reading

On my radar: Monty Don’s cultural highlights

The Gardeners’ World presenter on being a sucker for spy stories, pub nights in the early 70s, and having his prejudices challenged by a gigantic floral dog

‘Why do I have an interest in such horrible things?’: Emmanuel Carrère on the Paris terror attacks trial

The acclaimed French author attended the trial - the longest in French legal history – every day. As his gripping courtroom chronicle is published, he talks about trauma, justice – and being drawn to the darkest of stories

David Stratton on a life reviewing films – and the one TV show he thinks is ‘pretty damn good’

The 85-year-old critic has finished his huge history of Australian cinema from 1990 to 2020 – which involved rewatching 650 films. So which beloved classic has he changed his mind about?

Anne Michaels: ‘Language can’t represent brutality’

The Booker-shortlisted author on her inability to compromise, her friendship with John Berger, and the last book she gave as a gift

Maggie O’Farrell: ‘Having a stammer was instrumental in making me a writer’

The novelist, 52, talks about teenage affliction, the missing elements in stories and always loving Where the Wild Things Are

‘I am the industry!’: Keke Palmer on being Hollywood’s queen of content

Singer, gameshow host, podcaster – the actor has built a reputation for doing it all. And with an autobiography/self-help guide coming soon, she’s out to prove there’s nothing wrong with being a jack of all trades

Deborah Levy: ‘A writer’s career is choppy – I was 50 when I found success’

Her ‘living autobiographies’ and novels have earned her legions of fans, but that success was hard won. Deborah Levy talks about stamina, boldness, and finding delight in the details

Alan Bennett at 90: ‘What will people think? I don’t care any more’

In his 10th decade The History Boys writer is as prolific as ever with a war film in the works and a new sex-fuelled novella set in a home for the elderly. He talks about mourning Maggie Smith, turning down a knighthood and what he makes of Donald Trump

‘You can’t shoot climate change’: Richard Seymour on how far right exploits environmental crisis

In his latest book, Disaster Nationalism, the Marxist thinker explores how extremist movements around the world seek to blame fictional enemies for real disasters

The stoicism secret: how Ryan Holiday became a Silicon Valley guru

He has sold 5m books about this ancient Greek approach to life – and been feted by sports teams and CEOs. What makes this former PR man so popular?

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →
  • The Hunt for Gollum is being criticised for its all-white cast. Blaming Tolkien is the wrong answer
  • ‘No stuffy vibes … just good books’: Matt Haig to open bookshop in Brighton
  • The best recent crime and thrillers – review roundup
  • Andrew Motion: ‘Wilfred Owen became a kind of sacred text for me’
  • ‘At times I felt I’d bitten off more than I could chew’: Christopher Nolan on sweeping the Oscars, making The Odyssey – and getting a puppy
  • The Red Mouth by Sheila Armstrong review – profound exploration of Ireland’s deep time
  • National Year of Reading should extend to a decade, inquiry says
  • Worry Doll by Laura McPhee-Browne review – a sensual, sinister novel about the horrors of desire
  • Rebecca Perry wins Waterstones debut fiction prize for ‘delicious and dream-like’ novel
  • Grief Is the Thing With Feathers by Max Porter review – a bravura rendering of bereavement
  • A voyage of discovery: an idiot’s guide to reading The Odyssey
  • Up All Night by Imogen Willetts review – a seductive history of going out
  • Thursday briefing: Why magical kingdoms feel more relatable than real‑world romance​ for today’s young women
  • The Odyssey review – Nolan goes god-tier with breathtaking epic of men, monsters and moral metamorphosis
  • Utah bans Stephen King novella collection from public schools
  • ‘People are picking the dumbest fights’: the tortured history of America’s culture wars
  • Hidden Creatures by Dino Martins review – the revolting world of parasites
  • Animal Farm review – Andy Serkis’ Orwell adaptation slaughters the classic farmyard satire with sugar
  • The First House by Avni Doshi review – an intense portrait of marriage and freedom
  • Book publishers sue Google for copyright infringement over Gemini AI training
  • Nine out of 10 bestselling novels in UK have one thing in common: a woman is murdered
  • Juliet Gardiner obituary
  • Goodbye Chinatown by Kit Fan review – a chef’s elegy to London
  • The Art of Opposition by Courttia Newland review – piercing essays on culture and creativity
  • Chatsworth House pilots ‘community membership’ free entry scheme
  • The Brexit Effect, 2016-2026 edited by Anthony Seldon review – life without EU
  • The Anniversary by Andrea Bajani review – meet the terrible parents
  • The Guardian view on Patrice Lawrence: a children’s laureate for our times
  • ‘Stop telling people it’s weird’: Andrew Upton on his strange new novel, and having Cate Blanchett read it first
  • ‘People treat each other as disposable’: dating columnist turned novelist Annie Lord on love and sex in the age of apps

Contact www.ourdailyread.com   Terms of Use