A team of eight look after 12,000 trees which include 2,000 species. Many are unique; many more are the most remarkable exemplars of their kind. If Kew had no flowerbeds or glasshouses, it w... read more
This brilliant exploration of a C17th West African slave port, through the Inquisition's investigation of its most powerful (female) slave trader, reshapes our understanding of the slave tra... read more
Unravels the myths surrounding Capote's long stint in the Catalan town of Palamos in the 1960s. Guerriero is an agile writer and one of Latin America's foremost journalists, author of A Sim... read more
The author, who died in 2020 and left this book unfinished, knew Durrell well. Happily, the completed chapters cover the busiest portions of his friend's life: childhood in India, youthful m... read more
Beguiling, compelling novel about a Cumbrian wind - which occupies a Neolithic tribe, a wizard in the Dark Ages, a Victorian engineer and a contemporary scientist.
Catalogue of an exhibition at the Ashmolean, in which William's daughter - who was crucial to the work that went out under his name - is brought into the light.
Bauer has known the exiled Tibetan leader for over thirty years. These photographs document some of his more private, solitary moments as well as his public appearances and religious activit... read more
It's been a while since there was a decent illustrated book available on Clubland. This shows all the old stalwarts but also novices such as Soho House and Ned's.
Sharp, probing and morbidly funny, the book is a fictional retelling of the life of surrealist Austrian film director G W Pabst. Faced with relative anonymity in Hollywood, Pabst returned to... read more
A huge novel of sibling rivalry and the push-me-pull-you of inhabiting two cultures, spanning thirty years and three continents. Khemiri teaches creative writing on the prestigious NYU cours... read more
A successful actress meets a young man at a New York restaurant who claims to be her son. Instead of resolving the ambiguity or allegation of that relationship, this short novel considers - ... read more
Various animals use different heavy machinery - a crane to move a piano, a cement lorry to stir pancake batter... Very funny, also quite nerdishly informative and with good illustrations. Ag... read more
Like the eponymous strip, this book has no clear beginning or end: Lacey's blend of fiction and biography meet somewhere in the middle, physically and intellectually. These separate but comp... read more
Gloriously gothick fantasy about Pier Francesco Orsini, the creator of the Italian 'garden of the monsters' with its vast stone mouths and leaning buildings. An historical novel to beat them... read more
From the 1780s to (almost) the present; with particular reference to the roles of the Amendment and the Supreme Court. Lepore is a professor at Harvard.
Gorgeous turquoise and coral, gold and pearl. Meticulous research - including interviews with the last surviving Lhasa noblewomen and goldsmiths - makes this a rich cultural history of Centr... read more
A writer, poet, painter and doctor, Levi was banished to the remote and extremely poor region of Lucania for his opposition to Mussolini's regime. Described as a documentary novel, this is a... read more
A new translation of the work of China's most celebrated classical woman poet: separated from us by a millennium, her voice is clear, her themes familiar, her images vibrant.
Ravishingly illustrated with ink wash and brush, this is a tale about a mythological creature that inhabits China's primeval forests and a mischievous wind. Together they encounter a lake, a... read more
Lispector's last novel follows Macabea, a poor, sickly typist living in the slums of Rio who dreams of glamour but lives a life defined by invisibility and powerlessness. The narrator Rodrig... read more