Huawei – one of the world’s largest and most powerful technology firms – is rarely out of the media spotlight. Yet we know ...
It is 1964, somewhere near Birbeck College. A thirty-three-year-old Roger Penrose and the famously effusive mathematical ...
Money to Burn (Penge på lommen, 2020) is the first in a projected seven-novel series by the Danish poet and novelist Asta ...
Guess who’s back? “He is a thief, and a glutton, a coward, and a boaster, always ready to cheat the weak, and prey upon the ...
The Museum of Lost and Fragile Things is a fever dream of a book, gripping and trippy. Suzanne Joinson, a bestselling ...
Recently republished by Virago, with an illuminating foreword by Camilla Grudova, Caroline Blackwood’s The Fate of Mary Rose ...
According to many scholars in a variety of social sciences and economic disciplines, the world has, over the past two decades ...
Unlike almost any other conflict, the First World War has never loosened its grip on the scholarly or public imagination.
On the urging of a cave diver she knew, Ange Mlinko read Friday (1967), the revisionist Robinson Crusoe tale by Michel ...
How do I enquire about corporate subscriptions? If you are interested in talking to us about a corporate subscription, please contact [email protected]. When will I receive my first issue of ...
The opening sequence of Kev Lambert’s May Our Joy Endure signals the novel’s intent. Lambert devotes whole pages of prose to the sights, sounds and smells, and the inner lives of guests, at a decadent ...
In Kate Atkinson’s novel Transcription (2018), set in postwar London, Juliet Armstrong, a BBC producer for “Schools”, reflects that her colleagues seemed to be fixated on an Old England of sea ...