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 →

Make Some Space by Emma Warren review – a cultural history-cum-manifesto

This celebration of a chocolate factory turned club and studio and its importance to London’s jazz scene is invigorating

Beyond the Thirty-Nine Steps: A Life of John Buchan review – a man of no mystery

A biography by the author’s granddaughter reveals truth duller than fiction

The Mueller Report by the Washington Post review – the truth is out there… somewhere

Robert Mueller’s detailed investigation into whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia makes for a lively read

Jessica Andrews: ‘I didn’t feel like I deserved to speak’

The debut novelist on her struggle to open up literary life to working-class women

Book clinic: which books will make me laugh out loud?

From Martin Amis to Robert Robinson, our expert recommends the writers who provide a funny respite from real life

How to Treat People by Molly Case review – a nurse at work

An essential and unique profession … Case brings to vivid life her experiences on the wards and tells the stories of those she has cared for

What Blest Genius? by Andrew McConnell Stott and This Is Shakespeare by Emma Smith – review

Different Shakespeares down the ages ... which version of the national playwright does our era prefer, romantic wordsmith or streetwise experimenter?

A Stranger City by Linda Grant review – lost in the labyrinth of London

The uncertainties of Brexit and the need to belong are examined in a novel as fractured as the city it portrays

The Three Musketeers review – sweetly slapdash swashbuckling

It’s all for one and one for all in an enthusiastic if haphazard riot of dad jokes, dodgy accents and gleeful gallivanting

Shadowlands review – Bonneville dazzles as CS Lewis in divine revival

Questions of faith and loss drive a masterly story of the Narnia author in Rachel Kavanaugh’s deeply poignant production

The Darksome Bounds of a Failing World by Gareth Russell – review

The Titanic as a metaphor that has rattled down the ages ... does this book work as a morality tale about the collapse of a slipshod civilisation?

Unnatural Causes by Richard Shepherd review – pathology under the microscope

This fascinating memoir describes the life and many deaths of Britain’s top forensic pathologist

The Book of Baruch by the Gnostic Justin by Geoffrey Hill review – the last judgments

Hill dishes out the thunderbolts in a demanding portrayal of a nation out of kilter

Aetherial Worlds by Tatyana Tolstaya review – an elegiac Russian collection

Dead lovers, family and friends haunt these short stories – the author’s first collection to appear in English in 25 years

The Heavens by Sandra Newman review – brilliant time-travel fantasy

This electrifying novel of love, creativity and madness moves between Elizabethan England and 21st-century New York

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →
  • Should we treat environmental crime more like murder?
  • Lily King: ‘What is life without love?’
  • ‘Disorder, fright and confusion’: looking back at the devastating Wall Street crash of 1929
  • Spare us from romcom Austen. Give me the dark side of 19th-century life any day
  • The platform exposing exactly how much copyrighted art is used by AI tools
  • ‘We don’t celebrate Black creativity enough’: why the Black British book festival is bigger than ever
  • A prophetic 1934 novel has found a surprising second life – it holds lessons for us all
  • Critical thinking is one of the most important aspects of being human, according to Stoicism. So why are we handing it over to a machine?
  • The Guardian view on Austen and Brontë adaptations: purists may reel, but reinvention keeps classic novels alive
  • ‘Time to take the big leap’: Reese Witherspoon’s first novel hits the shelves
  • Digested week: Hit or miss? Conker unboxing craze leaves me baffled
  • The best recent crime and thrillers – review roundup
  • Maurice Rutherford obituary
  • Baek Se-hee, author of I Want to Die But I Want to Eat Tteokbokki, dies aged 35
  • ‘One of the oldest urban centres on the planet’: Gaza’s rich history in ruins
  • Don’t Look Now review – Du Maurier’s Venetian chiller has its dread shredded
  • Joelle Taylor: ‘I picked up The Weirdstone of Brisingamen in a swoon of nine-year-old despair’
  • Rumours of My Demise by Evan Dando review – eye-popping tales of drugs and unpredictability
  • Blue plaque to be unveiled at home of Thomas the Tank Engine creator
  • Hekate by Nikita Gill review – the ancient Greek goddess works magic in this retelling
  • A Great Act of Love by Heather Rose review – a compelling, complex tale of convict Australia
  • ‘We want our stories to be told’: NSW Labor pledges $3.2m to support writing and literature amid AI onslaught
  • Lesley Cookman obituary
  • Britney Spears calls claims in Kevin Federline’s memoir ‘extremely hurtful’
  • The Captive by Kit Burgoyne review – a literary novelist tries his hand at pulp horror
  • Unseen Bohemian Rhapsody verses to feature in Freddie Mercury lyric book
  • ‘The jobless should lead the attack’: a radical Jamaican journalist in 1920s London
  • Certified organic and AI-free: New stamp for human-written books launches
  • Artists plan nationwide US protests against Trump and ‘authoritarian forces’
  • Ballad of a Small Player review – Colin Farrell seeks redemption in Edward Berger’s high-stakes gambling yarn

Contact www.ourdailyread.com   Terms of Use