With the French capital poised for the Olympics, two new books seek to expose the social challenges that have long existed at the margins of the city
Robert Blackwill and Richard Fontaine give an authoritative, if bureaucratic, take on American foreign policy’s slow pivot to the east
The late author’s debut novel from 1959 has all the pleasure and tantalising mystery of her greatest short stories
The ‘City on Fire’ author returns with a full-blown tale of a troubled teen and her equally troubled father
From the bustle to the corset and the thong, under garments reveal a lot about society and ourselves
A deftly told tale of dysfunction across continents and generations
Chinese-British novelist Xiaolu Guo chooses East Sussex to explore themes of migration and memory
The Paris of Balzac and the banlieues; US failures in responding to the rise of China; the global trading system in crisis; a history of underwear and its evolving purposes; ambitious new fiction from Garth Risk Hallberg and Evie Wyld; a reissue of Mavis Gallant’s 1959 debut novel — plus Tej Parikh’s pick of the best economics titles
Two very different but compelling books explain how the complex international supply chain works and affects the things we actually care about
A radical approach to the international economy; empowering local governance; and lessons from Poland and Vietnam
The writer on his account of Putin’s invasion and why he believes that the west has for too long romanticised Russian culture
The follow-up to ‘The Incendiaries’ is an inventive, if sometimes too florid, examination of sex and societal expectations
The demand to ban a satirical novel underlines the shrinking space for free expression under Putin
Hillbilly elegy; polygraphs; The American right’s love for Russia
Sparrow gender politics; rueful Ruffer; Zynpocalypse; Norwegian parenting
From gothy pop to witchy reads, 20 tastemakers share their favourite recommendations
Susan Doran’s scholarly inquiry offers a new perspective on an overstudied period
The crime novelist on leaving Venice after 30 years — and why there will be no afterlife for detective Guido Brunetti
There’s an art to inventing a whole portable self
A debut novel set in Mussolini’s Italy expands into more timeless themes of adolescence and rebellion in a male-dominated world
Part nature notes, part kitchen memorandum, this small notebook documents her daily life in a style that is economical, poetic and precise
A young woman becomes increasingly jealous of her boyfriend’s ex-partner in Bea Setton’s unsettling, risk-taking novel
Medical historian Beth Linker provides a timely account of 20th-century America’s obsession with good posture
Catherine Fletcher’s history of the road-building prowess of the Romans
Reluctant guardians fall for the child placed in their imperfect care in Tom Lamont’s impressive debut novel
It’s an essential part of growing up, yet the number of kids who read purely for pleasure is at an all-time low
Part memoir, part science, part history, the Tasmanian novelist’s latest book rejoices in resisting definition
Irvine Welsh’s Ray Lennox confronts trauma again; puzzling happenings in Dubai and Tokyo; plus echoes of Marple and Ripley
As the new government faces an economy, society and political system in despair, there is no shortage of prescriptions to put things right
A novelist who survived one of eastern Europe’s most vicious tyrannies and drew comparisons with Kafka and Orwell
Displays at the former home of the French father of science fiction mix the mundane with the imaginary
The writer and celebrated gardener loves begonias, Botticelli’s Primavera and birds of paradise
A collection of contemporary short stories offers a refreshing range of responses to the absurdist nature of modern life
A story of gender, consumerism and the female pioneers who defied the patriarchy and helped shape the American dream
A wealthy family’s life is upturned by a kidnapping in Taffy Brodesser-Ackner’s fine follow-up to ‘Fleishman Is in Trouble’
Andrzej Tichý’s stories of lives blighted by poverty are told with an unnerving command of structure and narrative
Raj M Shah and Christopher Kirchhoff’s thriller-like book reveals how the Pentagon came up to technological speed