More from Books

The song of the bearded seal and other marvels

24 August 2024 9:00 am

Amorina Kingdon explores the extraordinary range of sounds beneath the sea, from the fluting calls of the larger mammals to the hums and moans of fish

A romantic obsession: Precipice, by Robert Harris, reviewed

24 August 2024 9:00 am

In the build-up to the Great War another drama unfolds, as the Prime Minister H.H. Asquith is seen to be distracted from politics by his infatuation with the beautiful Venetia Stanley

More curious canine incidents: Dogs and Monsters, by Mark Haddon, reviewed

24 August 2024 9:00 am

Mesmerising accounts of dogs feature in these latest stories, including Actaeon’s tragic hounds, St Antony’s comforting mutt and Laika, the husky hurled into space

A choice of thrillers for end of summer escapism

24 August 2024 9:00 am

Charlotte Philby’s appropriately titled The End of Summer skilfully explores the strains of a double life. Also reviewed: Ajay Close, Charlotte Vassell and Giuseppe Miale di Mauro

How weird was Oliver Cromwell?

24 August 2024 9:00 am

The pious people’s champion was not only a sadist and ruthless self-promoter; he could also indulge in infantile horseplay during the pressurised period leading up to the regicide

Can W.H. Auden be called a war poet?

24 August 2024 9:00 am

Though Auden maintained that the Great War had little effect on him, its catastrophe haunts his early poetry and shaped his anxiety about what it meant to be English

Two young men in flight: Partita and A Winter in Zürau, by Gabriel Josipovici reviewed

24 August 2024 9:00 am

Kafka, spitting blood, escapes Prague to join his sister in Bohemia, and a fictional lover flees the wrath of an outraged husband in Josipovici’s delightful two-in-one trick

Iris Apfel’s talent to amaze

24 August 2024 9:00 am

Instantly recognisable with her cascades of necklaces and startling colours (‘pastels make me nervous’), the interior decorator would achieve real fame with a Met exhibition in 2005

Celebrating Sequoyah and his Cherokee alphabet

24 August 2024 9:00 am

The writing system the Native American devised for his people was soon followed by a printing press, a newspaper and a far higher literacy rate than that of their oppressors

The juicy history of the apple

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Greeks, Romans, Norse and Celts all rooted their fertility myths in the apple – and through its association with the Garden of Eden it came to symbolise irresistible temptation

The enduring charisma of Brazil’s working-class president

17 August 2024 9:00 am

With his dedication to the labouring poor, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is seen as both the humblest of politicians and his country’s saviour – perhaps even endowed with miraculous qualities

Is it wrong to try to ‘cure’ autism?

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Do autistic individuals not feel empathy? What is the right treatment for an autistic child? These are just some of the questions discussed in Virginia Bovell’s passionate, informative memoir

Tales with a twist: Safe Enough and Other Stories, by Lee Child, reviewed

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Child has fun with the short story form, shooting from the hip. Sometimes the bad get their comeuppance, sometimes they don’t – but the good are rarely rewarded or even recognised

How could Hitler have had so many willing henchmen?

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Richard J. Evans tackles one of the Third Reich’s great mysteries. Why did so many apparently ‘normal’ Germans end up as perpetrators of mass atrocities?

Her weird name was the least of Moon Unit Zappa’s problems

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Frank and Gail Zappa’s eldest child describes how the endless battles between her manipulative mother and misogynist father in the 1970s blight the family to this day

Whoever imagined that geology was a lifeless subject?

17 August 2024 9:00 am

The shifting rocks of Earth’s crust are part of the planet’s ecology just as much as plants and animals, says Marcia Bjornerud – applying to geology the principle of universal connectivity

Imperfections in wood can make for the loveliest carvings

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Often beneath the surface of a knobbly lump bulging from the side of a tree ‘a myriad of swirling, almost impossibly beautiful clusters is hiding’, bursting with creative possibility

A death foretold: The Voyage Home, by Pat Barker, reviewed

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Cassandra prophesies Agamemnon’s death as punishment for his crimes in Troy. But she knows that she too must share his fate -- since ‘you can’t cherry-pick prophecy’

Bogart and Bacall’s first film together might as well have been called Carry On Flirting

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Just a few months after the release of To Have and Have Not, with its sassy, sexy script, the film’s stars were married. But, as in many of Bogart’s films, romance also involved intrigue

How ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’ plays tricks with the mind

17 August 2024 9:00 am

First published in 1798, Coleridge’s masterpiece, about a man obsessed with retelling his story, has obsessed readers ever since, because it never offers up closure

An unlikely comeback: Rare Singles, by Benjamin Myers, reviewed

10 August 2024 9:00 am

Dinah, a soul aficionado from Scarborough, persuades the forgotten elderly singer ‘Bucky’ Bronco to be guest of honour at a special concert. But will it all be hugely embarrassing?

David Baddiel’s father and mother must be the most talked about parents in Britain

10 August 2024 9:00 am

Colin the Dinky Toys dealer, familiar from Baddiel’s TV documentaries, emerges from this memoir as a relentless bully, but at least the ‘fantasist’ Sarah provides suitably funny anecdotes

What did Britain really gain from the daring 1942 Bruneval raid?

10 August 2024 9:00 am

The night-time dismantling of a German radar site in Normandy was a feat of skill, courage and imagination. But there was little improvement to Bomber Command casualties as a result

Women beware women: Wife, by Charlotte Mendelson, reviewed

10 August 2024 9:00 am

The claustrophobic bullying in this story of a lesbian marriage that sours is so well done it’s nauseating

Does bitcoin fit the definition of good money?

10 August 2024 9:00 am

Three philosophers readily acknowledge the cryptocurrency’s shortcomings, but emphasise its one important function – as a means of challenging autocratic regimes