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Non-Fiction

  • Wednesday, 9 October, 2024
    ReviewBiography and memoir
    Boris Johnson’s Unleashed — the hero of his own Homeric tale

    The man who would be world king claims many triumphs but reveals his mortal failings in this racy account of his political career

  • Tuesday, 8 October, 2024
    US presidential election 2024
    Trump spoke to Putin several times after he left White House, book says

    Bob Woodward says former US president also secretly sent Covid-19 tests to Russian leader

    Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump sit in front of flags in 2019 at the G7 summit in Osaka
  • Tuesday, 8 October, 2024
    ReviewHistory books
    The Great Transformation — the stifling effects of Mao’s ideology

    Odd Arne Westad and Chen Jian provide a superb history of China’s transition into and out of the Cultural Revolution

    A man is presented with a cowboy hat by a woman on a horse at a rodeo
  • Monday, 7 October, 2024
    Science books
    The Genetic Book of the Dead by Richard Dawkins — a joyful celebration of evolution in action

    Lessons from cuckoos, caterpillars and tortoises: the influential biologist’s new book ‘reads’ genes as palimpsests of the past

    Four speckled eggs in a nest. One is larger than the others, and a slightly different colour
  • Monday, 7 October, 2024
    Review
    The best new books on climate ahead of COP29

    Obama’s climate negotiator gives insights into the fraught Paris 2015 deal while a historian does a demolition job on our energy transition delusions

  • Sunday, 6 October, 2024
    The best books of the week
    On Freedom — Timothy Snyder’s timely manifesto for our fearful age

    The historian draws on his experience in Ukraine and eastern Europe to warn of the dangers of tyranny in the US

    A white flag with one horizontal blue stripe hangs on the fence of a single-storey brick-built house in southern Russia. Well-kept flowers are in bloom in front of the fence and the flag
  • Friday, 4 October, 2024
    ReviewBooks
    The best books of the week

    An urgent call to guard against tyranny; Kremlin propaganda and the complicity of Russia’s Orthodox Church; far-right white nationalism in America’s hinterlands; the Rillington Place murders and women’s lives in postwar Britain; David Spiegelhalter on the role of luck and chance; inside the artists’ studios (and their minds); new novels by Alan Hollinghurst, Rumaan Alam and Clare Chambers — plus Gideon Rachman’s pick of politics titles

  • Friday, 4 October, 2024
    The best books of the week
    How Painting Happens — Martin Gayford’s guide to the artist’s mind

    Technique or temperament? The alchemy of great art is elusive — but this peek inside painters’ studios offers tantalising insights

    A close-up of an oil painting focuses on the eyes of an ageing man
  • Friday, 4 October, 2024
    The best books of the week
    The Art of Uncertainty by David Spiegelhalter — the role luck plays in our lives

    A new book from the eminent statistician shifts from trivial issues of probability to the risk of getting cancer

    A mosaic depicting three men at a table playing dice
  • Thursday, 3 October, 2024
    The best books of the week
    The Baton and the Cross — Putin’s cynical co-opting of Russia’s church

    Ex-Moscow correspondent Lucy Ash examines the complicity of the Orthodox Church in the Kremlin’s war against Ukraine

    A large-canvas painting of dozens of bare-chested men waist-deep in the waters of a river in a ceremony over which white-robed priests preside
  • Monday, 30 September, 2024
    The best books of the week
    The Peepshow — a remarkable new look at the Rillington Place murders

    Kate Summerscale’s gripping analysis of the Christie crimes is also an uncompromising picture of women’s lives in postwar Britain

    A view looking down over a garden where five men are bent over large buckets of earth. Behind them laundry hangs on a washing line
  • Monday, 30 September, 2024
    The best books of the week
    The best recent politics books — insights on conflict

    The US foreign policy machine in action, origins of the new cold war, and Putin’s invasion of Ukraine as viewed from Washington

    Three book covers side by side:
  • Saturday, 28 September, 2024
    ReviewHistory books
    Some Men in London — a magnificent history of postwar gay life and moral panic

    Peter Parker’s two-volume anthology is a meticulous portrait of prejudice and the gradual shifting of public opinion

    Some men in suits and ties in a dark bar. In the centre, under a bright light, are two men, both holding wine glasses. One of them sits at a table, the other stands leaning over him
  • Friday, 27 September, 2024
    Review
    The New Nature of Business — billionaire learns how to sweeten the pill

    The heir to the Roche pharmaceuticals dynasty on how corporate power can be harnessed in the quest for sustainability

    A modern office block erupts from the tree-lined streets of Basel
  • Friday, 27 September, 2024
    Review
    Four Points of the Compass — how north, south, east and west defined the world

    Jerry Brotton takes an intriguing look at the cardinal directions and what they tell us about the Earth and its inhabitants

    A historical map filled with artistic representations of geographical features, landmarks, and navigational elements
  • Friday, 27 September, 2024
    Review
    Lucky Loser — behind the myths of Donald Trump’s fortunes

    Russ Buettner and Susanne Craig lay bare the financial facade — and the credulous system that believed the boasts

  • Tuesday, 24 September, 2024
    Review
    Over Work — have our jobs become too greedy for our time?

    Brigid Schulte makes a convincing case for a drastic overhaul of the way we earn a living

    A view from outside of two office floors at night. We can see a Christmas tree, one man sitting at a desk and two men gazing out of the windows
  • Sunday, 22 September, 2024
    Review
    Naples 1944 — heroism, hedonism and horror in wartime Italy

    Historian Keith Lowe takes a rigorous, myth-busting look at the city’s chaotic recovery in the wake of war and fascism

  • Saturday, 21 September, 2024
    FT Books Essay
    Did the 1990s break America’s faith in democracy?

    Three new books on the US look at the Clinton decade, the rise of conspiracies and the existential threat of November’s presidential election

    Fans of a political speaker gather at a convention to hear him talk
  • Thursday, 19 September, 2024
    Review
    Lower than the Angels — a magisterial history of sex, Christianity and the meaning of marriage

    Diarmaid MacCulloch’s thrilling book explores the complexities and contradictions of biblical scholarship and its changing interpretations

    An engraving of a man and a woman embracing in an outdoor setting
  • Thursday, 19 September, 2024
    ReviewBooks
    The Last Dream by Pedro Almodóvar — a life in fragments

    An uneven collection of writing by the Spanish filmmaker veers from deep personal reflection to cartoonish absurdity

  • Wednesday, 18 September, 2024
    ReviewBiography and memoir
    Kingmaker — setting the record straight on the Pamela Harriman story

    Sonia Purnell’s supremely enjoyable biography views the socialite’s life through a new and sympathetic lens

  • Tuesday, 17 September, 2024
    ReviewScience books
    The Burning Earth — how we exploited the environment and put our own future in jeopardy

    An international study of how human history has reshaped the planet, and vice versa

    A panorama of a giant hole in the ground on a rugged, sandy hillside, with buildings on the horizon
  • Saturday, 14 September, 2024
    Review
    What do women really want?

    ‘Want’, an anthology of sexual fantasies collected by Gillian Anderson, and Helen King’s scholarly ‘Immaculate Forms’ continue the boom of sex-positive books by female writers

  • Friday, 13 September, 2024
    Review
    Meditations for Mortals by Oliver Burkeman — time to embrace our imperfections?

    In his follow-up to the bestselling ‘Four Thousand Weeks’, the writer aims to unshackle us from the never-ending dream of life improvement

    A man in a black T-shirt writes on a board on a wall
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