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The Double X Economy by Linda Scott review – how to solve economic sexism

A passionate and timely study shows the damage caused to the global economy by failing to harness the power of women

Why We Drive review – a motorist puts his foot down

Matthew Crawford’s heartfelt riposte to a ‘smart’ future of driverless cars is persuasive and thought-provoking

In brief: Artifact; The Museum of Whales You Will Never See; A Woman Like Her – review

A joyful tale about the search for satisfaction and the sad fate of Pakistan’s first social media celebrity

Shadow State by Luke Harding review – Putin’s poisonous path to victory

This compelling account shows how sowing chaos in the west has led the Russian leader to a post-cold war triumph

British Summer Time Begins review – lyrical social history

Ysenda Maxtone Graham eloquently captures the quirky nature of the bygone British summer break

Our Time Is Now review: Stacey Abrams for attorney general, if not VP to Biden

An eloquent and moving call for voting rights reform shows the former Georgia House minority leader is ready for higher office

Bread Winner by Emma Griffin review – victims of the Victorian economy

Britain had never been richer, so how did working families become trapped in a nightmare of dirt and want? An intimate history, from darning to dinners in the gutter

The Wild Laughter by Caoilinn Hughes review – an Irish Cain and Abel

Resentment seethes between two brothers as their father lies dying in the wake of boom and bust

The Old Guard review – Netflix immortality thriller won’t live long in the memory

Not even Charlize Theron can save an action movie crying out for a comic touch to match the silliness of its premise

London’s New Scene by Lisa Tickner review – seven events that smashed the art world

From the pop art of Peter Blake, Pauline Boty and David Hockney to Michelangelo Antonioni’s Blow-Up … how 60s’ London came to lead the way

Fracture by Andrés Neuman review – the damage of the past

The Argentinian writer’s best novel yet follows a Japanese man investigating his country’s history of trauma and survival

Birdsong review – innovative lockdown staging of Faulks’s war saga

This socially distanced adaptation of Sebastian Faulks’s novel cleverly moves between times and places, with only an author narration striking a wayward note

Four new collections up for the Forward poetry prizes – review roundup

Postcolonial Love Poem by Natalie Diaz; Citadel by Martha Sprackland; Magnolia 木蘭 by Nina Mingya Powles; and The Air Year by Caroline Bird

Paying the Land by Joe Sacco review – a triumph of empathy

The painful history of the Northwestern Territory’s indigenous people takes the celebrated cartoonist away from AK47s and mortar shells, and into a different kind of war

Small Pleasures by Clare Chambers review – a suburban mystery

There is compassion and quiet humour to be found in this tale of a putative virgin birth in postwar Britain

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  • Two for two? Stella prize winner Evelyn Araluen nominated again for second poetry collection
  • My Lover, the Rabbi by Wayne Koestenbaum review – as fierce and strange as anything you’ll read this year
  • Stand By Me review – Rob Reiner’s nostalgic look at friendship and the loss of innocence still grips tight
  • The Black Death by Thomas Asbridge review – a medieval horror story
  • Modern heroes and a ravaged Earth: reboot of 1950s space comic Dan Dare has liftoff
  • ‘For leftist Jews, the Bund is a model’: the radical history behind one of Europe’s biggest socialist movements
  • Upward Bound by Woody Brown review – extraordinary debut from a non-speaking autistic author
  • London Falling by Patrick Radden Keefe review – a compulsive tale of money, lies and avoidable tragedy
  • The Stranger review – lustrously beautiful and superbly realised modern take on the Camus classic
  • The Hair of the Pigeon by Mohammed Massoud Morsi review – an epic tale of a refugee’s journey
  • Into the Wreck by Susannah Dickey review – an immersive exploration of grief
  • Jan Morris by Sara Wheeler review – masterly account of a flawed figure
  • How to use procrastination to your advantage
  • Life of Pi author Yann Martel: ‘I thought the Iliad was a book for old farts… then I started getting ideas’
  • ‘Enough of this me me me’: Blake Morrison on memoir in the age of oversharing
  • The Guide #237: Fab 5 Freddy, the street artist at the heart of New York’s creative zenith
  • The Guardian view on the Women’s Library at 100: a cause for celebration but not complacency
  • David Judge obituary
  • Clare Gittings obituary
  • The best recent poetry – review roundup
  • Sarah Hall: ‘Everyone wangs on about Anna Karenina – I’ve never been able to finish it’
  • Original Sin by Kathryn Paige Harden review – are criminals born or made?
  • Sororicidal by Edwina Preston review – a tale of two sisters tinged with danger
  • ‘Slavery bounded his life’: Thomas Jefferson’s views on race – in his own words
  • Death of an Ordinary Man by Sarah Perry audiobook review – an extraordinary chronicle of terminal illness
  • I did not tell my sister that our other sister was dying. Silence was the right choice, yet murky and painful
  • The Palm House by Gwendoline Riley review – the laureate of bad relationships
  • A feud ‘straight out of Succession’, a rental thriller and an ‘absolute ripper’: the best Australian books out in April
  • What we’re reading: writers and readers on the books they enjoyed in March
  • JD Vance announces a new memoir about his conversion to Catholicism

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