The ultra-processed food swindle
Engineered to trick our taste buds and appetites, artificially produced food is ruining our health and damaging our children. But…
ByDiscover the latest non-fiction books and must-reads with the New Statesman’s expert reviews. Including biographies, music books, political writing and more.
Engineered to trick our taste buds and appetites, artificially produced food is ruining our health and damaging our children. But…
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Simon Schama wants the post-pandemic world to learn from the case of Waldemar Haffkine: a tragic story of how prejudice…
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Also this week: the art of rejecting authors and how all the best stories are true.
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Jonathan Kennedy’s Pathogenesis reveals how diseases have built and broken empires and economies.
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Also featuring Anna Metcalfe’s Chrysalis and Octavia Bright’s This Ragged Grace.
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We admire trees for their solitary strength, but it is their remarkable facility for collaboration and sharing that provides lessons…
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Men at War, Luke Turner’s tender account of servicemen’s transgressive private lives, transforms our understanding of the Second World War.
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Alice Robb’s Don’t Think Dear reveals how the elite world of dance exerts a terrible physical and mental toll.
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A new history takes in everything from ancient Roman weddings to Don’t Tell the Bride to ask: can we redefine…
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Also featuring Eve by Claire Horn and A Stranger in Your Own City by Ghaith Abdul-Ahad.
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In her work, the novelist developed a radical philosophy of relationships. In her life, she put it into practice.
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Polly Barton’s “oral history” of porn shows the myopia of cultural criticism drawn from personal experience. We desperately need a…
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Once a death sentence, my diagnosis has proved a weird limbo of scattered treatment and blurred identities.
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How should we spend our hours in the age of burnout? Arguably not by reading Jenny Odell’s frustrating new book,…
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The New Yorker journalist’s latest book, The Real Work, sheds light on a career spent obsessively attempting to master the…
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The historian is right that Britain’s colonial legacy is morally complex. So why is his defence of it so simplistic?
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From politics and Big Tech to history and identity, the essential books for the year ahead.
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We might be tempted to see prizes for women as less necessary with each passing year – but non-fiction is…
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Blake Morrison’s account of sibling tragedy passes its moral questions on to the reader.
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Also featuring Tomorrow Perhaps the Future by Sarah Watling and Away From Beloved Lover by Dee Peyok.
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