Abdulrazak Gurnah’s lessons in humanity
Theft, the Nobel Prize winner’s new novel, is full of wisdom and free of judgement.
ByDiscover the best contemporary literature with the New Statesman’s expert reviews. From debut novels to short stories and literary veterans, get inspired here.
Theft, the Nobel Prize winner’s new novel, is full of wisdom and free of judgement.
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His thrilling new novel traces the mysterious cables stretching across our ocean beds.
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Never Let Me Go was once dismissed by critics for its “dear-diary” prose, but 20 years later the novelist’s masterwork…
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Natasha Brown’s Universality is a wincing satire of journalism, publishing and cancel culture.
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The stories in her zeitgeisty collection Show Don’t Tell are dated by their cultural references, but their astute observations are…
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Dream Count, the Nigerian writer’s first novel in more than a decade, is a powerful exploration of misogyny, masculinity and…
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The Irish author’s exhilarating fourth novel, The City Changes Its Face, proves there is nobody writing sex like her.
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Catholicism gave English literature something it needs to rediscover.
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As with all the Nobel Prize-winning South Korean writer’s stories, We Do Not Part rejects escapism to reach into the…
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The greatness of F Scott Fitzgerald’s novel lies in its details. But they are often overlooked.
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The Japanese writer and nationalist, a darling of the US far right, was haunted by the aesthetics of self-destruction.
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This vivid story of class and family by the rediscovered Italian novelist was where Elena Ferrante “discovered what literature can…
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From AI to the Beatles and from Pope Francis to Jung Chang, here are the new books to look out…
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The New Statesman’s choice of the year’s essential fiction and non-fiction.
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In Napoleon Symphony, the life of the French statesman was transformed into a virtuoso romp that still dazzles 50 years…
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Over 24 novels, the bruised Louisiana detectives Robicheaux and Purcel have become one of crime writing’s great partnerships.
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In Holding the Line, the author’s newly republished account of the 1983 Arizona miners’ strike, the novelist and the reporter…
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In Karla’s Choice the late spy novelist’s son Nick Harkaway has revived George Smiley – but he cannot match the…
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In Intermezzo, the Irish writer swaps polished wit and graphic sex for something deeper, messier and more mature.
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The New Zealand author, born 100 years ago, was both tormented and inspired by her experience of mental illness.
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