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The Fifth Seal review – a spiky political cabaret of cruelty and fear
The Guardian
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Rebel riders: on the road with a 1960s biker gang – in pictures
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Kafka: Selected Stories, edited by Mark Harman review – the master who never wasted a word
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The big idea: why your brain needs other people
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Poem of the week: Whilst the Ox and Ass by Paul Muldoon
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The memo: could one missed message have saved me a lifetime of regret?
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I Will Crash by Rebecca Watson – family dynamics poisonously awry
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Literary World Grapples With Alice Munro’s Legacy After Daughter’s Revelation of Abuse
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Ask Not: The Kennedys and the Women They Destroyed by Maureen Callahan review – a lacerating exposé
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Alice Munro knew my stepfather sexually abused me as a child, says Nobel laureate’s daughter
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The Guardian view on Frank Cottrell-Boyce as children’s laureate: a timely champion | Editorial
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In My Time of Dying by Sebastian Junger review – from here to eternity
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I Was There by Alan Edwards review – the rock gods’ right-hand man
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The Material by Camille Bordas review – when life is one long joke
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‘My flash kept blinding everyone on the dancefloor’: Elaine Constantine on capturing 90s northern soul all-nighters
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Orlando, My Political Biography review – inventive spin on Virginia Woolf’s novel
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Goodlord by Ella Frears review – this email to a landlord is dark and dazzling
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‘I have an obsession with authenticity’: David Baddiel on growing up, golf and family affairs
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The Umbrella Murder by Ulrik Skotte review – the tireless pursuit of Agent Piccadilly
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Sunday with Louise Minchin: ‘I’m an activity addict’
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Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: ‘Satire is a way to make myself less depressed’
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On my radar: Mark Leckey’s cultural highlights
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‘Stealing with both hands’: veteran reporter Joe Conason details the right wing’s graft
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‘An explosion of talent’: Iain Banks’s The Wasp Factory at 40
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Great Britain? by Torsten Bell – why Labour must move fast and fix things
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The Lasting Harm by Lucia Osborne-Crowley review – legacy of abuse
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‘You can write anything about sex, but you cannot talk about money’: Taffy Brodesser-Akner on life after Fleishman
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Little Rot by Akwaeke Emezi review – a wild weekend in New Lagos
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David Sedaris is an icon of indignation in a world that keeps on irking
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Shy by Max Porter audiobook review – tale of a ne’er do well, done well
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‘It’s a snowball effect’: the gen Z niche reading event making waves in New York
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Garth Risk Hallberg: ‘David Foster Wallace convinced me to change the way I was living’
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True Love by Paddy Crewe review – from the heart
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Travelling by Ann Powers review – a dazzling life of Joni Mitchell
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Protests against arts sponsorship are killing culture. Be careful what you wish for | Martin Prendergast
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Five of the best books about literary threesomes
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Inheritance by Harvey Whitehouse review – the power of unity
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Rosarita by Anita Desai review – a haunting tale about family bonds and betrayals
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Gretchen Whitmer wants to meet far-right plotters who tried to kill her, book reveals
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Thousands of Albanians honour author Ismail Kadare in Tirana
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This month’s best paperbacks: Colson Whitehead, Britney Spears and more
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I Will Crash by Rebecca Watson review – a unique take on sibling torment
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All the Worst Humans by Phil Elwood review – confessions of a cleanup man
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The Guardian view on the power of brevity in the arts: an antidote to the blather of politics | Editorial
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‘Reading’s in danger’: Frank Cottrell-Boyce on books, kids – and the explosive power of Heidi
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Frank Cottrell-Boyce chosen as new children’s laureate
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Book festivals previously sponsored by Baillie Gifford seek donations
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Brazil’s unparalleled spate of book bans is page out of US culture wars
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Orlando, My Political Biography review – Woolf’s trans hero gets a 21st-century mashup
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Why Are You Shouting? by James Womack review – tales of the metropolis
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‘They always got away with it’: new book reveals Kennedys’ shocking treatment of women
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Bonding by Mariel Franklin review – a comprehensive vision of a devastated society
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‘An ancient shadow permeates his work’: Alberto Manguel on the genius of Ismail Kadare
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A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder review – this very modern Nancy Drew is a hoot
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A life in quotes: Ismail Kadare
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Poem of the week: Marbled Orb Weaver by Matt Howard
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Ismail Kadare, giant of Albanian literature, dies aged 88
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Sexed by Susanna Rustin review – the fraught battle for feminism
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On the Couch: Writers Analyze Sigmund Freud review – the shrink’s shrink engagingly examined by Siri Hustvedt, Susie Boyt and others
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Long Island Compromise by Taffy Brodesser-Akner review – an old-fashioned maximalist rush of storytelling
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The Lasting Harm: Witnessing the Trial of Ghislaine Maxwell by Lucia Osborne-Crowley review – a voice for the powerless
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How a solo retreat helped trelight my creative fire
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The Language of War by Oleksandr Mykhed review – what role for the artist in times of catastrophe?
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‘We now feel proud to be mixed’: the blessings and biases of being biracial
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Monumenta by Lara Haworth review – Serbian house of horrors
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In brief: Storm Pegs; Beautiful Days; A Travel Guide to the Middle Ages – review
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Beach books at the ready: authors pick their essential summer reads
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Coming of Age: How Adolescence Shapes Us by Lucy Foulkes review – deep dive into the teenage mind
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The big picture: Abdulhamid Kircher reflects on his traumatic family history
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