25 books to read in 2025
From AI to the Beatles and from Pope Francis to Jung Chang, here are the new books to look out…
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Immerse yourself in the captivating world of literature with our collection of articles, offering literary analysis, book recommendations, author spotlights, and thought-provoking discussions that celebrate the written word.
From AI to the Beatles and from Pope Francis to Jung Chang, here are the new books to look out…
ByThe left is losing its grip on the literary realm.
ByIn Stranger Than Fiction, the American editor Edwin Frank seeks to tell the story of the modern novel through an…
ByThe all-action American novelist is praised for his virile heroics – but it was his instinct for “the feminine” that…
ByIn Napoleon Symphony, the life of the French statesman was transformed into a virtuoso romp that still dazzles 50 years…
ByAs with DH Lawrence, Orwell’s private life has imperilled his reputation. Is there a way back?
ByWe read and write fiction because it asks impossible questions, and leads us boldly into the unknown.
ByLili Anolik’s dual biography reveals the writers’ vicious battle to be the true voice of 1970s California.
ByOnline, intimacy is imagined and mystery non-existent. It’s time to lose our smartphones and find ourselves again.
ByOur finest living social novelist has made it his mission to disrupt the sexual and literary status quo.
ByThe award-winning playwright on the nobility of teachers and the masterpiece that is The Sopranos.
ByNew Statesman writers and guests choose their favourite reading of the year.
ByFrom white supremacists to black activists, readers have sought moral legitimacy in Milton’s epic poem.
ByThe novel becoming a cultural accessory means to look like a reader, not be one.
ByIn Empire of the Sun, published 40 years ago, the great novelist turned his childhood experiences in a Japanese prisoner-of-war…
ByThe New Zealand author, born 100 years ago, was both tormented and inspired by her experience of mental illness.
ByWith departments in decline, the English professor has become a risible figure in the British novel.
ByGreat Irish literature is defined by dissent. So why do so many writers uphold the status quo?
ByAlso this week: My part in the great IT outage, and trying to impress Keir Starmer.
ByThe past three decades have seen the Everymanification of British politics.
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