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Una cerveza, por favor! The golden age of the British package holiday – in pictures
The Guardian (Books)
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Ours by Phillip B Williams review – a fragile utopia for those escaping slavery
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Burma Sahib by Paul Theroux review – how Eric Blair became George Orwell
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How the World Made the West by Josephine Quinn review – rethinking ‘civilisation’
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Bodily invasions: images inspired by mysophobia – in pictures
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Terrible news for pedants as Merriam-Webster relaxes the rules of English
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‘I get looks of disbelief’: the visionary women shaking up architecture worldwide
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The return of Nam Le: 'As long as I'm terrifying myself a little bit, I'm on the right track'
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Caliban Shrieks by Jack Hilton review – lost voice of the north
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Sand, sheep and survival: in the desert with the Bedouin people – in pictures
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The Freaks Came Out to Write review – how the Village Voice changed American journalism
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The big idea: should we all be putting chips in our brains?
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Poem of the week: Spring Equinox, 2021 by Gillian Clarke
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Wrong Norma by Anne Carson review – unjoined-up thinking at its best
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Clear by Carys Davies review – compelling Scots historical drama
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Meet Me at the Surface by Jodie Matthews review – powerful forces in the Cornish wilds
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Barcelona by Mary Costello review – potent snapshots of solitary confinement
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The Washington Book review: Carlos Lozada on Trump and other targets
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Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar review – riotous tale of a grieving son
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‘Being a nun was the great love story of my life’: Catherine Coldstream on why she joined – then fled – a convent
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‘It’s the new normal’: In Kyiv’s newest book store, readers fear how Ukraine’s story will end
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‘They didn’t understand us at all’: why the miners’ strike still captivates Britain, 40 years on
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Using books as interior design? It’s a trend with a tale
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A final wild gift: who’d have guessed this time with Dad as he’s dying could be so ineffably precious?
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Michael Donkor: ‘Representation feels more nuanced to me now’
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On my radar: James Smith of Yard Act’s cultural highlights
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‘At 80, I still have a lot of anger’: American poet Nikki Giovanni
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I always believed my funny, kind father was killed by a murderous teenage gang. Three decades on, I discovered the truth
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‘Look at your country! It’s amazing’: Armistead Maupin on moving to London
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Tom Gauld on the author of his own misfortune – cartoon
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The Book of Love by Kelly Link review – a magical debut of life after life
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The indescribable scent of feijoa – the exotic fruit that became the smell of New Zealand childhood
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‘There’s a double layer of nostalgia’: David Nicholls on One Day returning to the book charts
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Children’s and teens roundup – the best new picture books and novels
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What is there to lose? Why I said yes to a blind date at 75 | Deborah Moggach
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Wifedom by Anna Funder audiobook review – the first Mrs Orwell
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Sigrid Nunez: ‘When I was growing up I wanted to be Dr Seuss’
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Melting Point by Rachel Cockerell review – witnesses to history
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Why I hope my parents won’t read my novel
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Five of the best books about grief
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I See Buildings Fall Like Lightning by Keiran Goddard review – growing up and apart
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‘A visual testament to Palestinian society’: inside a powerful new photography book
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The Trading Game by Gary Stevenson review – cashing out
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‘Something lurking behind the curtain’: the dark, violent downfall of drummer Jim Gordon
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The Night Alphabet by Joelle Taylor review – relentlessly inventive
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The Guardian view on celebrating working-class memory: a way of looking to the future | Editorial
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Byron: A Life in Ten Letters by Andrew Stauffer review – wrong but Romantic
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Fourteen Days co-edited by Margaret Atwood review – a pandemic tale
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Keir Starmer: The Biography by Tom Baldwin review – steady as he goes
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‘A picture of hell’: inside the UK’s nuclear reactors – in pictures
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Richard Osman to publish first novel in new crime series
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Crime and thrillers of the month – review
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After a Dance: Selected Stories by Bridget O’Connor review – hilariously inappropriate slices of life and death
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Royal Society of Literature refers itself to Charity Commission as authors pen petition
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The big idea: this simple behavioural trick can help you get more out of life
The Guardian (Books)
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Change: A Novel by Édouard Louis review – a knack for dramatising filial strife
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Poem of the week: Blue Field by Lavinia Greenlaw
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No Judgement by Lauren Oyler review – modish observations from a rarefied world
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The Guardian view on festivals and the future: bound together by the power of a shared vision | Editorial
The Guardian (Books)
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The Crisis of Narration by Byung-Chul Han review – how big tech altered the narrative
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Alphabetical Diaries by Sheila Heti review – a radical fusion of linguistic experiment and philosophical inquiry
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Gift of the gab: how to become a supercommunicator
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Melting Point by Rachel Cockerell review – the hunt for a homeland
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Author Peter Ackroyd: ‘You eat a great deal of knowledge. You sick it up. And then you start again’
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Slum Boy: A Portrait by Juano Diaz review – moving memoir that recalls Shuggie Bain
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BBC disinformation reporter Marianna Spring: ‘My approach to fear is to try to make sense of it’
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The big picture: teenage girls at play in east London
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Find Me the Votes review: Fani Willis of Georgia, the woman who could still take down Trump
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