Reviewed in Short: New titles by James Hamilton, Xochitl Gonzalez, Ben Rawlence, and Gulbahar Haitiwaji and Rozenn Morgat
Constable: A Portrait by Hamilton, Olga Dies Dreaming by Gonzalez, The Treeline: The Last Forest and the Future of Life…
ByRead all the latest book reviews from the New Statesman and discover the best novels, non-fiction, essays and biographies. If you’re looking for something more specific, explore our sections dedicated to politics books and history books.
Constable: A Portrait by Hamilton, Olga Dies Dreaming by Gonzalez, The Treeline: The Last Forest and the Future of Life…
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From his Dulwich days to the EU referendum, the man who made Brexit has always been a lone provocateur.
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Free Love by Hadley, Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller by Wassef, Brick by Brick: How We Build a World Without…
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The Glory and the Sorrow by Tackett, It’s the Leader, Stupid, by Adonis, East Side Voices edited by Lee, and…
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Freedom by Law, Stolen Focus by Hari, The Burgundians by Van Loo and Where You Come From by Stanišic.
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Notes From Deep Time by Gordon, Solid Ivory by Ivory, We Don’t Know Ourselves by O’Toole and Sour Grapes by…
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The year’s essential reading in 20 titles.
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1,000 Years of Joys and Sorrows by Ai, Oh William! by Strout, The Magician by Tóibín and The Ritual Animal…
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From The Jungle Book to Z for Zachariah, New Statesman writers remember the children’s books that shaped us
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Allegorizings by Morris, Mothers, Fathers and Others by Hustvedt, The Anthropocene Unconscious by Bould, and The Gardener by Vickers.
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These Precious Days by Patchett, Break the Internet by Yallop, Muddling Through by Weldon and Falling Down by Burton-Cartledge.
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Greek Myths by Higgins, I Live a Life Like Yours by Grue, The Library by Pettegree and der Weduwen and…
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The supermodel sets herself against the patriarchal norms that crush women, but fails to see how she upholds them.
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Henry “Chips” Channon, The Diaries by Heffer, Larger than an Orange by Burns, Nina Simone’s Gum by Ellis and Peaces…
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The late David Graeber’s history of early human societies presents civilisation as a descent from anarchy into servility. But was…
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How the billionaire entrepreneur and libertarian grasped the fundamental truth of capitalism.
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Silverview is a disappointing coda to his Cold War masterpieces.
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The morality contests of the online world and our relentless pursuit of status.
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A century after its publication, the philosopher’s Tractatus remains as radical as ever.
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Beautiful World, Where Are You despairs at the shallowness of fiction – and then embraces it.
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