Add this topic to your myFT Digest for news straight to your inbox
You select the topic, we deliver the news.
Invalid email
By signing up you confirm that you have read and agree to the terms and conditions, cookie policy and privacy policy.
Many are torn between enjoying capitalism and decrying it. Julian Baggini considers how to resolve the tension
A rediscovered novel about a Jewish Dutch girl in the 1920s refuses retrospective gloom
Over the course of a century, marketing has managed to infiltrate every area of life. Is resistance futile in the internet age?
An engaging science history celebrates the women who helped make sense of the night sky
How Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky laid the foundations of behavioural economics
In his final book, Günter Grass celebrates the joys of life even as he laments the encroachments of age
Penelope Lively’s return to the short story form is a tour de force
‘What book changed my life? Joseph Heller’s Catch-22. That novel opened my eyes as to who a nation’s true enemies can be’
From ‘Window-Cleaner Sees Paintings’
Business school professors share the books and articles that changed their outlook
The digital age has ushered in a renaissance for books, vinyl and other real things
‘As a child I wanted to find the wardrobe that would lead me to Narnia’
The novelist finds the perfect foil for exchanges on art, politics and the beautiful game
How one coruscating review led to a war of words between Vladimir Nabokov and Edmund Wilson
John Rees’s narrative about the English movement is an inspirational romance for the left
This compendium of short stories and recipes contains as much joy as melancholy
From ‘Pandemonium’
‘What am I most proud of writing? ‘The Killing Game’, which was published in Esquire and drove hunters nuts’
An analysis of Indian migration to the US tells a story of mutually beneficial exchange
Notions of exceptionalism are challenged in a history that depicts the young republic as an empire
In universities and space agencies around the world, astrobiology is flourishing as never before. Clive Cookson investigates what scientists have uncovered so far