A visit to Edinburgh, judging the Winner of Winners, and a case of mistaken identity
My fellow Baillie Gifford judges are formidable close readers: diligent, erudite, passionate, smart, committed. They made my job very easy.
ByImmerse yourself in the captivating world of literature with our collection of articles, offering literary analysis, book recommendations, author spotlights, and thought-provoking discussions that celebrate the written word.
My fellow Baillie Gifford judges are formidable close readers: diligent, erudite, passionate, smart, committed. They made my job very easy.
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Our Best of Young British Novelists list proved that publishing is more permeable, and more transformative, than we imagine.
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Curtis Sittenfeld’s Romantic Comedy presents a new male ideal: famous, feminist, fantastically handsome – and blind to your every flaw.
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In featuring just four men, Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists confirms what we already knew: the literary male has…
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The ultimate GQ snob, 007 more than anything represents consumer goods becoming available to people outside of aristocracy.
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In his final novel Tomás Nevinson, the late Spanish author concluded a profound literary project built on personal and political…
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The writer has stayed vital through constant movement and insisting on “living in the world as it is, not as…
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Herbert Marcuse was the philosopher of the future in an age without one.
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Releasing bowdlerised books into a predictable storm of ridicule and then making the “classic texts” available is clever business.
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The year’s publishing highlights, including new novels by Salman Rushdie, Diana Evans and Eleanor Catton.
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I fear my reluctance to read fiction reveals how focused on myself I have become, amid the inwardness of depression.
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Kids are expected to shrug off a daily barrage of sexual and violent imagery – but are seen as too…
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Sanitising the writer’s legacy may help him remain profitable – but his books can’t be easily cleaned up.
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His life was blighted by poverty, but his poetry made exhilarating connections between sex, faith and death.
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In his first interview since the attack on his life, the novelist refuses to be defined as target or victim.
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How the novelist hid his cruel side – infidelity, bullying callousness, malice – in plain sight in his fiction.
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The Wizard of the Kremlin has provoked fierce debate in France, where support for Russia lingers on both the right…
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9 December 1939: The author was a man who spoke to the child in all of us.
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To label her an over-hyped ingenue is to misunderstand her greatest conceit.
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The posthumous publication of Pirate Enlightenment shows how the anarchist, like any true intellectual, never grew out of his childhood…
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