Masa Son: the world’s most reckless investor
Gambling Man documents a career punctuated with attention-grabbing successes and abrupt reversals
Gambling Man documents a career punctuated with attention-grabbing successes and abrupt reversals
Gliff is a different sort of project, but still one which reveals a desire to comment on contemporary culture
As much as anything else, Citizen is a book of omissions
In his new book, Spencer A. Klavan takes his reader through a brief but brilliantly executed history of scientific discovery
The pop psychologist’s new book is not likely to light the fire of faith in any young fan
Her memoir suggests that the icon doesn’t know what makes her compelling
Matt Purple’s Decline from the Top: Snapshots from America’s Crisis and Glimmers of Hope is a veritable joy to read
From Here to the Great Unknown is a tale about the intoxicating highs of the entertainment business, and a grim reminder of its abysmal lows
Gabriel’s Moon is the welcome return of one of Britain’s most reliably gripping novelists
In The Voyage Home, she takes the infrastructure of legend and invests it with brutal realism
In Ingrained, Callum Robinson’s aim is not simply to convey his love of working in his chosen way, but to evoke his craft warts and all
Karla’s Choice plays out as a clever, loving, sporadically tongue-in-cheek addition to the very best of John le Carré’s work
In Agent Zo , Clare Mulley has written a thrilling, consistently tense page-turner
Rebel Sounds is an uplifting compendium of hidden histories of those who have produced, performed and distributed music in times of war
Deborah Levy’s latest book is a sketch of the author in motion
Rhodri Lewis’s book offers so many fresh insights and well-turned phrases that I had to buy a new notebook to fit them all in
Maureen Callahan challenges us to ask whether our American heroes are really who we think they are
Nixey takes us on a tour across the early centuries of Christianity
Entrances and Exits shows the Seinfeld actor’s clever, energetic, dissatisfied, self-critical mind at work
The novel’s central conceit serves as a sharp satire of our data-driven, algorithmic age