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Murmur by Will Eaves review – inside the mind of Alan Turing

First love and the nature of consciousness are examined in this extraordinary journey into the cryptanalyst’s dreamworld

A Higher Loyalty by James Comey review – Hillary’s emails, the election and a loathing for Trump

The FBI director sacked by Trump a year ago attempts to justify his pre-election decisions and paints a portrait of the president that could not be uglier

Wade in the Water review – lost voices of the American underground

A long overdue collection from US poet laureate Tracy K Smith weaves a spiritual hymn to the nation’s forgotten people

Our Place review – damning indictment of Britons’ ecological complacency

Mark Cocker delivers a blistering attack on the country’s collective failure to protect its landscape and wildlife

The One Who Wrote Destiny by Nikesh Shukla review – funny and fascinating

This tale about a British-Asian family tackles trauma and intergenerational relationships with wit and wisdom

Ponti by Sharlene Teo – review

A much-lauded debut novel featuring a faded movie star is a lesson in the limitations of a creative writing course

The People vs Tech by Jamie Bartlett review – once more into the digital apocalypse

The latest treatise on technology taking over our lives suggests democratic systems are incompatible with the digital age, but the theory lacks coherence

In brief: Meetings With Remarkable Manuscripts; House of Names; The Chameleon – reviews

Antiquarian delights in a study of manuscripts, Greek myth via Colm Tóibín, and a very high-concept historical novel

Seven Types of Atheism by John Gray review – fascinating study of disbelief

The British philosopher has produced a thought-provoking account of the tradition of atheism and the problems with it

The Road to Unfreedom by Timothy Snyder review – chilling and unignorable

This persuasive book looks at Putin’s favourite Russian political philosopher and the template he set for fake news

Book clinic: which male authors excel at writing female characters?

From Tolstoy to John Banville, our expert suggests the men who can write from a woman’s perspective

Packing My Library by Alberto Manguel review – a bibliophile’s demons

The urbane Argentinian grumpily boxes up his 35,000 books and writes a Jekyll and Hyde set of reflections on libraries and the power of reading

Self & I by Matthew De Abaitua review – my Withnail days with Will Self

When a graduate moved into the cottage where Self was living, he was instructed on everything from writing to eating oysters to the consumption of drugs

Census by Jesse Ball review – a moving portrayal of radical innocence

A father and his son with Down’s syndrome go on a road trip in this remarkable novel about the nature of empathy

A Higher Loyalty review: Comey is unsparing in his disgust at Trump

While A Higher Loyalty contains little by way of stunning revelation, James Comey is ruthless when recounting the events that led to his dismissal

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  • Lily King: ‘What is life without love?’
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  • 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
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  • 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

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