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 →

Late Fame review – Willem Dafoe is a natural poet in a slice-of-life New York fable

A postman’s forgotten poetry collection finds new admirers in a tale of how the mystique of the past filters to the present

At Work review – photographer ditches career for gig economy and writing in poverty drama

Though the film is eventful enough, there is a bland placidity with which Bastien Bouillon plays a man following his dreams in this quaintly naive drama

How the Bendigo writers’ festival’s code of conduct caused a walkout and claims of censorship

The last-minute code of conduct and the backlash are the latest in a string of controversies ‘symptomatic of the current environment’ in the arts

Irvine Welsh: Reality Is Not Enough review – a candid portrait of a literary one-off

Paul Sng’s documentary finds the Trainspotting author as funny, sharp and unrepentant as ever – from boyhood in Leith to globetrotting fame and a hallucinogenic trip in Canada

Mare’s Nest review – an opaque, challenging reflection on the end of the world

Ben Rivers’s cine-poem, based on Don DeLillo’s climate crisis play The Word for Snow, follows a child’s strange encounters as she wanders in a postapocalyptic world devoid of adults

NSW spending $1.5m on literary hub to rival Melbourne’s Wheeler Centre and boost Sydney writers’ festival

Funding will mean 75 Sydney writers’ festival events will take place over next 12 months

‘Youths everywhere were spitting over tinny beats playing off a Nokia’: great grime photographer Simon Wheatley

He was young and broke when he became grime’s first documentarian. Then his book Don’t Call Me Urban captured the energy of the grittier first wave – and an expanded edition is finally here

‘No one is immune to grief’: the team turning A Single Man into a sexy, grimy, heartbreaking ballet

Musician John Grant was blown away by Christopher Isherwood’s 1964 novel, finding deep resonances in its tale of gay love and loss. Now, he’s put songs to choreographer Jonathan Watkins’s new dance adaptation

‘Stupider than everyone else’: one comic’s semi-naked bid to perform dozens of Penguin novels

In a riotous show, Garry Starr dons a tailcoat, flippers and little else to re-enact a bookshelf full of classics. Would you help him bring The Jungle Book to life?

Salman Rushdie says AI won’t threaten authors until it can make people laugh

Author tells Hay festival AI has no sense of humour but when it writes a funny book ‘we’re screwed’

‘Infused with the fire born of resistance’: the magic of the Calabash literary festival

Marlon James, Ian McEwan and Sheryl Lee Ralph lit up the Jamaican book event, celebrating the small island’s gargantuan cultural footprint with readings, discussions and DJs

Challenge use of ‘nefarious’ news sources, says environmentalist

Mike Berners-Lee tells Hay festival audience to make spread of political deceit more socially embarrassing

Awkward clapping, no-sand beaches and Alexander Skarsgård’s thigh-high boots: a trip to Cannes to see my film

Harry Lighton’s film Pillion is based on the novel Box Hill so, misgivings riding alongside, it felt right for the author to motorbike to the film festival for its premiere

Pillion review – 50 shades of BDSM Wallace and Gromit in brilliant Bromley biker romance

Alexander Skarsgård and Harry Melling play unlikely lovers in this sweet and extremely revealing first-time drama from Harry Lighton, adapted from Adam Mars-Jones’ Box Hill

Die My Love review – Jennifer Lawrence excels in intensely sensual study of a woman in meltdown

Lawrence excels as a woman whose bipolar disorder is exacerbated by husband Robert Pattinson’s infidelity, with super-strength direction from Lynne Ramsay

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →
  • Trump as Don Corleone: ‘Every time he does somebody a favour … he expects a quid pro quo’
  • 70 brilliant books for the summer
  • ‘Failure was my thing’: Women’s prize winner Virginia Evans on her long journey to success
  • The Guardian view on literature in wartime: words do not stop when the bombing begins
  • Mary Hooper obituary
  • ‘We can’t give up on Afghans’: Lyse Doucet on the remarkable ‘people’s history’ that won her the Women’s prize
  • More of the Christchurch shooter’s online comments have been uncovered, New Zealand researchers say. Does it change the picture?
  • The best Father’s Day gifts in the UK for dads, grandads, uncles and friends
  • ‘Are audiobooks cheating?’ We answered your questions about our 100 top novels list
  • The best recent science fiction, fantasy and horror – review roundup
  • Ruth Ozeki: ‘All my books are an attempt to recreate Charlotte’s Web’
  • The Long Drop review – Denise Mina’s whisky-soaked tale of triple murder is horribly gripping
  • The Twitnam Summer by Hester Grant review – Swift, Gay and Pope’s season in the sun
  • How to Love the World by Ilka Tampke review – a woman is trapped by a fallen tree
  • Women’s prize: Virginia Evans wins for fiction and Lyse Doucet takes award for nonfiction
  • The Artist by Lucy Steeds audiobook review – a sensory feast in Provence
  • ‘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

Contact www.ourdailyread.com   Terms of Use