All That Glitters by Orlando Whitfield review – from Banksy to banged up
Kathryn Hughes
The exhilarating story of an art fraudster’s downfall, by his former friend and partner
Society books
Against Landlords by Nick Bano review – valuable ideas for how to solve Britain’s housing crisis
Rowan Moore
In this flawed but powerful book, a housing lawyer argues that an abundance of private landlords, not a dearth of homes, is to blame for the miseries of ‘generation rent’
History books
Moederland: Nine Daughters of South Africa review – my ancestors’ role in the horror of apartheid
Karen Jennings
Autobiography and memoir
Knife by Salman Rushdie review – a life interrupted
Rachel Cooke
Politics books
Ten Years to Save the West by Liz Truss review – economical with the truth about her own downfall
Andrew Rawnsley
Autobiography and memoir
Bald by Stuart Heritage review – hair today, gone tomorrow
Simon Usborne
Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.
The novelist and critic on finding inspiration in her Twitter timeline, why she found the middle-aged man in her new book easier to write than his daughter, and how she learned her craft through poetry
Sarah Perry
For much of my life, I loved God. The echo of that never fades
The Essex Serpent author on astronomy, her new novel Enlightenment and how her strict Baptist upbringing made its mark
Poet Jackie Kay
I could have been brought up by Tories!
Sunjeev Sahota
I’ve always been in labour movements – but I’m critical of identity politics
‘I’d love a scathing review’
Novelist Percival Everett on American Fiction and rewriting Huckleberry Finn
Michael Magee
There’s a disbelief at how I’ve ended up
Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.
Regulars
The books of my life
Caleb Azumah Nelson: ‘James Baldwin ignited something in me that’s still burning today’
Big idea
The big idea: what if dreaming is the whole point of sleep?
Rather than being an optional extra, dreams might be vital to our functioning
Where to start with
Where to start with: Patricia Highsmith
Thanks to Netflix’s moody adaptation, Ripley, there’s more awareness of Highsmith’s skills as an expert writer of guilt, ambivalence and moral dilemmas at odds with reality
Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.