Lessons from the afterlife
In A Second Act, intensive care doctor Matt Morgan collects stories from patients who returned from death. Can they teach…
ByDiscover the latest non-fiction books and must-reads with the New Statesman’s expert reviews. Including biographies, music books, political writing and more.
In A Second Act, intensive care doctor Matt Morgan collects stories from patients who returned from death. Can they teach…
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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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Lili Anolik’s dual biography reveals the writers’ vicious battle to be the true voice of 1970s California.
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Simon Critchley’s On Mysticism shows how the language of religious rapture can help us teach us how to live.
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The best crowds are joyful expressions of democracy and belonging. So why do we fear them so much?
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The Olympic cyclist’s memoir All that Matters reflects on the terminal cancer diagnosis that tested his resilience to the limit.
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In his book Dawn’s Early Light, the architect of Project 2025 preaches the necessity of burning Washington’s “elite” institutions to…
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In Josh Cohen’s All the Rage, a psychoanalyst offers a path through the divisive world of online grievance and populist…
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From white supremacists to black activists, readers have sought moral legitimacy in Milton’s epic poem.
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Over a single night in 2015, terrorists killed 130 people in Paris. In Emmanuel Carrère’s account of the ensuing trial,…
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His reporting was fuelled by a cool contempt for authority.
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From Here to the Great Unknown – a memoir of life as Elvis’s daughter – is a story of generational…
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The enemy of Putin survived the first attempt on his life. His memoir Patriot reveals why he returned to Russia…
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New books by Anushka Asthana and Michael Ashcroft show that the lessons of 2024 are sobering for both parties.
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The great scientist strays into speculation in The Genetic Book of the Dead, his latest defence of his “selfish gene”…
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New studies of Winston Churchill and Harold Wilson show the rewards and perils of political biography.
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The educated rationalists addressed by Revenge of the Tipping Point are sometimes the dumbest – and baddest – of them…
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The government wants to reset its relationship with organised labour – but history shows this won’t be an easy task.
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A new biography by AN Wilson shows how the playwright, poet, scientist and statesman poured himself into his greatest work.
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