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Non-Fiction

  • Wednesday, 6 May, 2026
    FT Books Essay
    Stalin, Putin and the history of poisoned Russian minds

    The war in Ukraine is the latest manifestation of a mindset that has been decades, if not centuries, in the making. Three books debunk the myths that Russia tells itself

    3 hours ago
    A screen-grab from Russian TV shows a close-up of a person in camouflage holding a small stuffed toy marked with a red ‘Z’" with another person in military gear beside them.
  • Monday, 4 May, 2026
    Business books
    Control Science — a one-sided case against managers

    From the inspection towers of 19th-century factories to the data architecture of Amazon warehouses, Henry Snow casts those who surveil workers as capitalism’s villains

  • Friday, 1 May, 2026
    Books
    The best books of the week

    From British declinism to Antony Beevor on Rasputin and a Chinese factory memoir. Plus fiction by Elizabeth Strout — and Boyd Tonkin on Marilyn Monroe and the power of reading

    A photograph of tall bookshelves packed with books
  • Friday, 1 May, 2026
    The best books of the week
    The Dog’s Gaze — our constant companions in art as in life

    Historian Thomas W Laqueur’s copiously illustrated book explores why dogs have long been an integral feature of the artistic world

  • Friday, 1 May, 2026
    The best books of the week
    From Lady Chatterley to Marilyn to Dua Lipa, books are in rude health

    Reading for both pleasure and betterment endures — even if unquestioning faith in literary canons and critical authority is gone

    Boyd Tonkin
    Marilyn Monroe sits outdoors on playground equipment, reading ‘Ulysses’ by James Joyce.
  • Thursday, 30 April, 2026
    The best books of the week
    Prophecy — why predictions are all about power

    Oxford philosopher Carissa Véliz’s ingenious, scathing survey of forecasting takes a well-timed swipe at today’s obsession with predictive algorithms

    Workers and engineers at a large wooden structure under construction at the Northern Outfall Sewer site in London, 1860.
  • Wednesday, 29 April, 2026
    The best books of the week
    A Vast Horizon — art, sex and freedom in a world on the brink of war

    Anna Thomasson mixes biography with photographic analysis to explore the tangled relationships of Picasso, Lee Miller and their circle in the summer of 1937

  • Wednesday, 29 April, 2026
    The best books of the week
    Have we gone too far with British declinism?

    Three new books portray a land caught in a muddle and beset by inequalities. A familiar story or is it time for a reset?

    A vacant shop with “TO LET” signs in the window, on a street with other businesses in Newquay.
  • Tuesday, 28 April, 2026
    The best books of the week
    Rasputin by Antony Beevor — the corrupt prophet at the heart of a rotten Russian empire

    The peasant who became a powerful adviser was a symptom, not the cause, of the Romanovs’ downfall, argues the ‘Stalingrad’ author

  • Tuesday, 28 April, 2026
    The best books of the week
    Adrift in the South — the stark memoir of a Chinese factory labourer

    Xiao Hai tells a story of shattered dreams and the grim reality of conditions inside China’s manufacturing sector

    Factory workers in blue uniforms assemble engines on a production line in China.
  • Monday, 27 April, 2026
    The best books of the week
    The Black Death by Thomas Asbridge — portrait of a medieval killer

    A gripping and authoritative global history of the plague that killed more than 100mn people in the 14th century

  • Saturday, 25 April, 2026
    Robert Skidelsky
    Obituary. Robert Skidelsky, economic historian, 1939-2026

    The biographer of Keynes straddled disciplines and political parties in a lengthy and often controversial career

    Robert Skidelsky in a suit and tie, seated in front of shelves filled with bound volumes of The Economist
  • Friday, 24 April, 2026
    Life & Arts
    The Violence — Adriana Ramírez’s exceptional story of her grandmother’s Colombian war

    A vivid portrait of the civil conflict of the 1940s and 1950s — and how it opened the way for the armed groups that still control parts of the country

  • Thursday, 23 April, 2026
    History books
    Korean Messiah — how Christianity shaped the Kim personality cult

    Jonathan Cheng’s rigorous, revealing history traces the dynasty’s founding myths — and what they mean for the country’s place in the world today

  • Thursday, 23 April, 2026
    Life & Arts
    House of Fidelity — the dynasty at the heart of the investment powerhouse

    A journalist lifts the lid on how the Johnson family battled to keep control of the asset manager in a history packed with luminaries of finance

    Abigail Johnson and Edward (Ned) C. Johnson III smiling and applauding while seated at an event.
  • Thursday, 23 April, 2026
    History books
    Talking Classics — Mary Beard makes a passionate case for fun as well as relevance

    The acclaimed historian’s eye-opening guide to the ancient world reminds Martin Wolf why classics are as relevant as ever

    A close-up of a marble statue of a nude woman lying down, head rested on one bent arm.
  • Wednesday, 22 April, 2026
    Fiction
    The full and interesting lives of writers’ alter egos

    Doctors, dairy farmers, failed novelists — how authors’ fictional selves take on an identity all their own, distinct from their creators

    Nilanjana Roy
  • Monday, 20 April, 2026
    History books
    Hoax — what the fake news of the Enlightenment age tells us about misinformation today

    Madeleine Pelling’s vivid history of imposters across the 18th century explores the boundaries between reason and unreason

    An illustration of a group of finely dressed people gathered around a seated woman with a feathered headdress, engaging with her in a manner suggesting curiosity or admiration.
  • Friday, 17 April, 2026
    Life & Arts
    If This Be Magic — the rich and strange art of translating Shakespeare

    Daniel Hahn’s chatty, cheerful book explores the challenges — and pitfalls — of matching the bard’s linguistic virtuosity whether in Thai or Tamil

    Several people stand around a chalkboard with "To be or not to be" written in multiple languages, including German, English, Arabic, Chinese, and others.
  • Thursday, 16 April, 2026
    Life & Arts
    Do Not Go Gentle by Kathleen Stock — a flawed argument against assisted dying

    As the UK bill flounders in the House of Lords, the philosopher makes an impassioned case opposing a change to the law

    Composite of a room with an empty bed and an outdoor dining area with a round table with a table cloth and empty chairs
  • Wednesday, 15 April, 2026
    Biography and memoir
    The Wonderful World That Almost Was — a full-bodied artistic romance

    An enthusiastic biography of New York art duo Peter Hujar and Paul Thek adds to their growing reputation four decades after their death

    Peter Hujar poses outdoors holding a Rolleiflex camera, standing near railroad tracks with a shoulder bag.
  • Tuesday, 14 April, 2026
    Books
    You Are the Führer’s Unrequited Love — the truth behind the ‘good Nazi’

    In a hybrid of fiction and essay, Jean-Noël Orengo explores how Albert Speer charmed Hitler and then laundered his own postwar reputation

    Adolf Hitler stands between Hermann Goering and Albert Speer, all in Nazi military uniforms, among a group of men.
  • Monday, 13 April, 2026
    Life & Arts
    Robot-Proof — can the next generation keep a step ahead of the machines?

    Vivienne Ming argues for a change in how we prepare the young for a near-future dominated and ‘deprofessionalised’ by AI

    A Galbot humanoid robot holds a bottled drink in front of a refrigerator stocked with beverages.
  • Friday, 10 April, 2026
    Life & Arts
    Plastic Inc — how the defining material of the modern age ended up trashing the planet

    Beth Gardiner’s angry, well-researched book investigates a profit-driven industry and the environmental debts it imposes on generations

    Bales of crushed clear plastic bottles with colourfulul caps tightly packed together.
  • Thursday, 9 April, 2026
    Books
    Mutiny: The Rise and Revolt of the College-Educated Working Class — the overqualified fight back

    Noam Scheiber documents the debt-laden graduates stuck in low-status jobs who are sparking a new wave of labour protest

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