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A genre-defying saga of a town taken over by escaped slaves is a compelling blend of historical fiction and magic realism
An idiosyncratic style drives this story of loss and lust in working-class gay life in rural England
An astute portrayal of the dislocation of first-generation immigrants
After ‘Such a Fun Age’, the bestselling writer turns her finely tuned satire on the power dynamics of US college life
Laird Hunt’s portrait of seemingly ordinary lives in Reagan-era Indiana is a timely refresher on human decency
Set Prague, this exhilarating novel within a novel offers all manner of narrative twists, turns and tricks
Two exciting debuts join Hisham Matar’s magnificent story of a Libyan expatriate and Michael Cunningham’s multi-year look at life in lockdown
Edited by Margaret Atwood and Douglas Preston, this ‘multi-voiced novel’ is a valuable reminder that stories can teach and console
Elisa Shua Dusapin dispatches an outsider to Russia’s far east in a tale of alienation and our longing to build connections
For all the S&M and kink, this late-period novel is a unashamedly romantic paean to the power of love
We may think that the Oscar-nominated movie is knockabout comedy, but how truthful is it to the way the industry works?
An entertaining historical survey explores marriage and relationships of all kinds among Austen and her Regency contemporaries
The latest novels from James Patterson, Louise Welsh, Agnes Ravatn and more
Alexis Soloski’s impressive debut thriller explores identity through the blurring of acting and real life
The British-Palestinian novelist on writing from life, the destruction in Gaza and whether artists have a role when catastrophe unfolds
Lucas Rijneveld confirms his talent with a disturbing, mesmerising follow-up to ‘The Discomfort of Evening’
The author’s brilliant follow-up to ‘The Nix’ immerses readers in a marriage played out among the worlds of academia and the wellness industry
Sara Stridsberg shows an eye for the uncanny in her compellingly strange and sinister short stories
As the centenary of the writer’s death approaches, is our world looking more Kafkaesque than he could ever have imagined?
Impressive first-time novels take in the art world, class and cookbooks — and sexual shenanigans in swanky ski resorts
Forced friendships and creativity in an era of multiplying crises come under the spotlight in this new novel
Colin Barrett’s pitiless, poetic and bleakly funny return to rural Ireland is a step up from his short stories
An English eccentric’s account of life as a perennial traveller and perpetual outsider
Fiona Williams’ affecting debut novel unpicks the racism behind a sheen of normality in a Home Counties village
From ex-CIA David McCloskey to Tess Gerritsen, spooks and subterfuge, espionage and danger from Moscow to Beirut
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