Football’s data delusion
A new book by Rory Smith looks at why the English Premier League is still searching for its Moneyball moment.
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A new book by Rory Smith looks at why the English Premier League is still searching for its Moneyball moment.
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In reviving local and popular musical traditions, the composer found haunting new expressions of Englishness.
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Also featuring How To Speak Whale by Tom Mustill and a history of the Nineties by James Brooke-Smith.
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Family is a terrible way to satisfy our desire for love and care, according to the writer and academic Sophie…
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The writer’s exasperating new memoir offers a full dinner service of clichés and an insight into the glib fogeyism of…
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Also featuring Sick Note by Gareth Millward and a biography of Steely Dan’s Donald Fagen.
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A new biography shows how one of Labour’s most successful leaders kept the party united at all costs.
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How the author’s 1972 guide to foraging anticipated today’s appetite for local, seasonal and sustainable eating.
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How China’s uneven ascent has been driven by debt and the Communist Party’s obsessive pursuit of social stability.
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Also featuring titles by Lawrence Osborne and Matthew Yeomans.
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As a neurosurgeon, Marsh was comfortable with death. But in his new memoir And Finally, he finds himself on the…
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In his new book, the former England cricket team selector recalls what he has learned about doubt and decisions.
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After her infamous 11-day disappearance in 1926, the author retreated from public view. Lucy Worsley’s new biography claims to solve…
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The Great Plant-Based Con by Buxton, A Visible Man by Enninful, Henry “Chips” Channon: The Diaries (Volume 3) edited by…
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How a bestselling debut novel about a group of murderous students became a cult classic.
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In their new books, Andrew Murray and James Schneider ask what the left can learn from its time in control…
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The latest Cormoran Strike novel from “Robert Galbraith” weighs 1.25 kilograms – making it heavier than a bag of sugar…
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Maurice Glasman’s book is an urgent reminder that statecraft is not about immediate victories but securing well-being for all.
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Fifty years ago the UK forcibly removed the inhabitants of the Chagos Islands. Will they ever be allowed to return?
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His new novel Lessons is alert to human texture and complexity – and it’s his best in 20 years.
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