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The writers offering solutions for — or escape from — a new decade, from cures for a sick planet to Hilary Mantel’s Tudor finale
The Nobel laureate completes his trilogy in unerringly precise prose
Two books celebrate the London Review of Books and the New Statesman
Economist Daniel Susskind warns that we underestimate the looming tech disruption
Navid Kermani travels Europe’s frontiers to explore the legacy of conflict and modernity
A philosophical exploration of death, love and art
Flamboyant editor who transformed the lives of some of the world’s greatest authors
An authorised Crichton sequel, English monsters reborn — and futures bright and dystopian
Dorothy Macardle’s 1950s page-turner explores fear and superstition in a village haunted by recent history
A finely wrought sequel revisits the Bulgaria-based expat American of ‘What Belongs to You’
An exclusive short story written for the FT
From Jamaica’s poet laureate, winner of the 2019 Queen’s Gold Medal for Poetry
Inquiry into Gabriel Matzneff seen as #MeToo moment for literary establishment
Must-reads in 2020, Coetzee concludes his trilogy, how tech will hit jobs — and a 1950s reissue
The death of a doctor who transformed Afghan lives contrasts with revelations of US ignorance
Chief executive remembered as ‘a great leader and a good friend’ who rescued retailer
It is not just western liberalism under attack but the very notion of a system based on objective facts
A selection of terrific titles that inform and inspire
Whose back feels like an anatomy textbook in Braille? Who sparred with Trump? Who’s too posh for her target base? Have lunch again with Federer, Schwarzenegger and Beckham . . .
A powerful critique of rentier capitalism
The writer explores how black stories have been marginalised or erased through time in an Audible series
Can a writer’s voice truly remain neutral? A bold approach by a French essayist compared to Montaigne
The genre booms, pitting sleuths against 1880s gangsters, sinister tech and a classic death on a night train
An experimental collection challenges the short story form with shape-shifting worlds
Why the Skripal case is only the latest from a playbook of KGB and NKVD operations
Alexander Zevin examines the newspaper’s influence on liberal history — and its tendency to back the wrong horse
Samantha Harvey’s memoir of a year of poor sleep brings wry humour to our deeper fears
A friendship between two very different boys in a lost Ceylon makes a beautiful coming-of-age novel
Booming sales mean more work for narrators — but what will future tech bring?
No easy conclusions from Microsoft’s diplomat in chief
Priya Basil’s reflections on food and sharing show us how we could lead more generous lives
From the author of ‘The Green Hollow’ and ‘To Provide All People’
Walter Scheidel’s provocative thesis draws parallels with the EU — but is he right?
Tales of the glamour and glories of the religious wars are well-paced, authoritative and full of flair
Nino Haratischvili serves up a family saga set against the turbulent history of Georgia
The horse’s head! The sex! The murders! — How a spectacular failure cost me a friendship
Onno Blom paints a meticulous picture of 17th-century Leiden — but gaps remain in the Old Master’s apprentice years