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Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange review – tapestry of colonial trauma is harrowing yet healing
The Guardian
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‘Lincoln had something to say’: historians ponder lessons for the age of Trump
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Generation Anxiety: smartphones have created a gen Z mental health crisis – but there are ways to fix it
The Guardian
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Caledonian Road by Andrew O’Hagan review – the Dickens of our post-Brexit pandemic age
The Guardian
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Laurent de Brunhoff, author of Babar children’s books, dies at 98
The Guardian
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Babar Heir and Author Laurent de Brunhoff Dies Aged 98
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Mat Osman: ‘I wanted to write about a dirty, dangerous, working-class London’
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The king of zing: lemons in art – in pictures
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On my radar: Frank Tallis’s cultural highlights
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Rediscovered: the long-lost script that helped The Great Gatsby become a classic
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‘Organising is the best kind of antidepressant’: Astra Taylor and Leah Hunt-Hendrix on solidarity
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The Exvangelicals review: fine study of faith under fire in the age of Trump
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‘End of the world vibes’: why culture can’t stop thinking about apocalypse
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Code Dependent by Madhumita Murgia review – understanding the human impacts of AI
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The best recent crime and thrillers – review roundup
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The Rising Down by Alexandra Harris review – the joy of Sussex
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Headshot by Rita Bullwinkel review – brilliant debut of teenage boxers
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Botanical fairytale set in Kew Gardens wins the Waterstones children’s book prize
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Cuckooland by Tom Burgis review – reputation management
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Five of the best books about the Victorians
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Grow Where They Fall by Michael Donkor review – sex education
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The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt – a pocket full of poison
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Caleb Azumah Nelson and Mary Jean Chan shortlisted for Dylan Thomas prize
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Where to start with: Buchi Emecheta
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The Kellerby Code by Jonny Sweet review – social-climbing satire
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Serbian author Barbi Marković: ‘The real horror story is life itself’
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Broken Archangel by Roland Philipps review – Roger Casement’s unquiet ghost
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Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange review – wounds of history
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Free Therapy by Rebecca Ivory review – delicious reveals and rug pulls in stories of aimless women
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Donald Trump’s niece to publish follow-up to bestselling memoir this year
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Booze, jigsaws and rainbows: revisiting Ray’s a Laugh – in pictures
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The House of Hidden Meanings: A Memoir by RuPaul review – poignant, egotistical and often wise
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Two Hours by Alba Arikha review – an impassioned tale of how life pummels and reshapes us
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Did you solve it? Lewis Carroll for insomniacs
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The big idea: should we worry about trillionaires?
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Poem of the week: To Robert Browning by Walter Savage Landor
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The Silver Bone by Andrey Kurkov – droll detective work in revolutionary Kyiv
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All Before Me by Esther Rutter review – the healing power of place and poetry
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Rites of Passage by Judith Flanders review – a brilliant account of Victorian Britain in mourning
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‘I don’t think I developed emotionally’: Earl Spencer on the pain of boarding-school abuse
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Among the exvangelicals: Sarah McCammon on faith, Trump and leaving the churches behind
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Crime and thrillers of the month – review
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‘Longing for home’: letters of Irish emigrants to US reveal 400 years of trials and triumphs
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Me and Mr Jones by Suzi Ronson review – Stardust memories of David Bowie’s hairdresser
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The Rev Richard Coles: ‘I think my CV looks like the work of a fantasist’
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The Bee Sting’s Paul Murray: ‘Climate worry is the unavoidable background for being alive in the 21st century’
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‘The little girl in Persepolis has grown up’: Marjane Satrapi on life after her hit graphic novel – and her radical new work
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From Brideshead to Saltburn: why we can’t get enough of country house stories
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Tommy Orange: ‘My whole family has had problems with addiction, including myself’
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Your Wild and Precious Life by Liz Jensen review – spiritual awakening in the aftermath of loss
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‘Everything is possible’: a worrying new book explores the danger of disinformation
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Romantasy, AI and Palestinian voices: publishing trends emerge at London book fair
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AI translation: how to train ‘the horses of enlightenment’
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Kae Tempest: ‘I used to read David Icke. Imagine that’
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Stone Yard Devotional by Charlotte Wood review – a quiet novel of immense power
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Paul Murray’s The Bee Sting wins inaugural Nero book of the year prize
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Five of the best books inspired by classic novels
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Impossible Monsters by Michael Taylor review – fossil feuds
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The biggest myth about Maria Callas? She was no tragic icon
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The Painter’s Daughters by Emily Howes review – Gainsborough’s girls
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Don’t Look Left by Atef Abu Saif review – in the line of fire
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Poet Liz Berry’s The Home Child wins Writers’ prize book of the year
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Who’s Afraid of Gender? by Judith Butler review – the gender theorist goes mainstream
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Help Wanted by Adelle Waldman review – acid comedy of precarity
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Carnegie medal for children’s books shortlist announced
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Reading Genesis by Marilynne Robinson review – rich literary reading of the first book of the Bible
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Mona of the Manor by Armistead Maupin review – tales of the country
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Brett Kavanaugh knows truth of alleged sexual assault, Christine Blasey Ford says in book
The Guardian
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Joanne Harris: ‘Some of us don’t see the line between the books and the world’
The Guardian
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