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The great Australian nightmare: how the housing crisis inspired a wave of brutal – and funny – pop culture

Soaring prices, rental stress and intergenerational inequality are fuelling new films, books and plays, including Birthright and Kill Your Boomers

How Garry Trudeau’s Doonesbury cartoons captured America: ‘One of our nation’s greatest journalists’

A new book looks back at the work of artist and journalist Garry Trudeau and how he told the story of a country’s highs and lows through a comic strip

What We Ask Google by Simon Rogers review – the secrets of our search history

The company’s data editor trawls through billions of queries to deliver a portrait of the world’s preoccupations

Fieldwork As a Sex Object by Meena Kandasamy review – story of a deepfake sex tape

The author of When I Hit You returns with a pithy, savagely funny tale of online shaming and the Indian manosphere

‘Writing is exactly like love – you need to do it in the dark’: novelist Leila Slimani on starting a new chapter in her life

Now in residence at the Madrid Prado, the author talks about its dark, inspirational Goyas, the clandestine nature of her writing – and why she finally wrote about her jailed then posthumously exonerated father

Stripteases, ecstatic embraces and a dog in a dress: the full-on photos celebrating queer dancefloors worldwide

A thrillingly unsanitised new photo book captures the liberating power of queer clubs in all their sexy, messy, kinky, cacophonous glory. ‘I wanted it to feel like a night out,’ says the woman behind it

Leonora in the Morning Light review – pioneering British artist who fled convention for the surrealists

From Paris to Mexico, Leonora Carrington’s extraordinary life is retold with intelligence and restraint, though not quite enough imagination

Fairyland review – moving memoir of queer parenting and new kinds of family in 70s San Francisco

Andrew Durham’s tender adaptation of Alysia Abbott’s book finds warmth, humour and heartbreak in an unconventional family unit shaped by love and loss

The Vivisectors by Missouri Williams review – twisted love story from a cult writer

Williams follows her prize-winning debut with a gothically overstuffed tale of a cynical young woman in a crumbling university town

Crossing the Wine Dark Sea by Emily Wilson review – a masterclass in translation

The polarising translator of the Odyssey and the Iliad sets out her philosophy in this fascinating collection

Medieval King Arthur manuscript could fetch £2m at auction

Book containing early versions of the Merlin and Grail legends has remained in private hands for 700 years

Ian McEwan says pessimism ‘a bigger problem than climate change’

Speaking at Hay festival as UK breaks May heat record, author says optimism is a ‘moral duty’

Tell us: what have you been reading this month?

We would like to hear about the books you’ve particularly enjoyed this month

From racy riders to romantic rivals: Jilly Cooper’s best books – ranked!

The second series of Rivals has put the bestselling author’s brand of saucy jollity back on screen, but what is her bonkbuster nonpareil?

A Billion Years of Sex Differences by Steve Stewart-Williams review – what we get wrong about men and women

A psychologist wades into controversial territory in this counterintuitive study of nature, nurture and gender

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  • ‘Pleasure and invigoration’: Diana Evans wins UK’s Jhalak prose prize
  • Sales of Meta whistleblower’s memoir soar after Hay festival ‘silencing’
  • Tell us: what is your favourite beach read?
  • Lovers XXX by Allie Rowbottom review – a wild journey through the 80s LA porn scene
  • Stolen Revolution by Bozorgmehr Sharafedin and Yeganeh Torbati review – Iran’s recent history explained
  • Booker prize launches new Quick Read in effort to boost adult reading rates
  • The End of Everything by M John Harrison review – near-future visions from an SF master
  • Bill Jordan obituary
  • I have found the perfect book group – we discuss problematic text messages
  • ‘I want to be other people’s cautionary tale’: how do you financially prepare for a parent’s death?
  • ‘Wear something that makes you feel silly!’ Can Austin Kleon’s tips put the spark back in my life?
  • Villa Coco by Andrew Sean Greer review – fun in the Tuscan sun
  • A British Childhood by Frank Cottrell-Boyce review – are we raising a bookless generation?
  • Ruth Artmonsky obituary
  • ‘Far right groups prey on it’: Olivia Laing on the weaponisation of loneliness
  • Should we ditch the idea of three meals a day?
  • Air-raid alerts and frontline memoirs: Kyiv hosts literary festival amid war
  • Search for lesbian grandmothers who inspired children’s book
  • Readers’ top 100 novels of all time
  • Move over Middlemarch! Readers’ top 100 novels
  • The Guardian view on the UK’s first centre for illustration: visual literacy, and the sheer joy of images, matter
  • Best Australian books out in June: a buzzy novel, gripping nonfiction and an extremely unusual debut
  • Unseen Edith Wharton short story is published more than a century later
  • The best recent poetry – review roundup
  • Rivals’ Rutshire – a place where modern Britain’s brutal divisions disappear in a cloud of sex
  • The Children by Melissa Albert review – intriguing fairytale of creativity’s dangers
  • The Ruiners by Ellena Savage review – a playful and subversive take on Great Expectations
  • Dina Nayeri: Marjane Satrapi brought Iranian women like me out of hiding
  • I Deliver Parcels in Beijing by Hu Anyan audiobook review – a grim life in China’s gig economy
  • Marjane Satrapi, creator of Persepolis and acclaimed French-Iranian artist, dies aged 56

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