The art of the royal memoir
Britain’s royal family sells books like nobody’s business
Britain’s royal family sells books like nobody’s business
Iron Curtain: A Love Story by Vesna Goldsworthy reviewed
The Cloisters by Katy Hays reviewed
The Shards by Bret Easton Ellis reviewed
How can an established artist, especially one this famous, pivot to criticism?
Quartet: How Four Women Changed the Musical World by Leah Broad reviewed
‘If you’re publishing mostly books by people of color and people who are gay, then where’s the diversity?’
‘It would be very difficult, with the homogenization of culture, to publish a book like Trainspotting now’
They’re struggling to preserve their culture after generations of hedonism and nihilism
The American Psycho and Less Than Zero author discusses his first novel in thirteen years
Trump’s acting defense secretary Christopher Miller tells all in his new book
Hopefully the new year will see several stars burn brightly in the literary firmament
It all makes sense now
Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster have failed to merge
Suleika Dawson’s account of her affair with novelist John le Carré has caused controversy. But she is unrepentant
A new novel explores the lengths communities will go to protect their own
The Philosophy of Modern Song by Bob Dylan reviewed
Do Let’s Have Another Drink!: The Dry Wit and Fizzy Life of Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother by Gareth Russell reviewed
Can celebrities use an autopen? The times, they are a-changing
Remembering Erskine Childers 100 years later