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An entertaining historical survey explores marriage and relationships of all kinds among Austen and her Regency contemporaries
The latest novels from James Patterson, Louise Welsh, Agnes Ravatn and more
Alexis Soloski’s impressive debut thriller explores identity through the blurring of acting and real life
The British-Palestinian novelist on writing from life, the destruction in Gaza and whether artists have a role when catastrophe unfolds
Lucas Rijneveld confirms his talent with a disturbing, mesmerising follow-up to ‘The Discomfort of Evening’
The author’s brilliant follow-up to ‘The Nix’ immerses readers in a marriage played out among the worlds of academia and the wellness industry
Sara Stridsberg shows an eye for the uncanny in her compellingly strange and sinister short stories
As the centenary of the writer’s death approaches, is our world looking more Kafkaesque than he could ever have imagined?
Impressive first-time novels take in the art world, class and cookbooks — and sexual shenanigans in swanky ski resorts
Forced friendships and creativity in an era of multiplying crises come under the spotlight in this new novel
Colin Barrett’s pitiless, poetic and bleakly funny return to rural Ireland is a step up from his short stories
An English eccentric’s account of life as a perennial traveller and perpetual outsider
Fiona Williams’ affecting debut novel unpicks the racism behind a sheen of normality in a Home Counties village
From ex-CIA David McCloskey to Tess Gerritsen, spooks and subterfuge, espionage and danger from Moscow to Beirut
The Italian master crafts a ‘gothic fantasy’ that exhumes postwar guilt and collective amnesia
The writer’s first novel for 13 years asks what it means to make a new home in a place you love but can never leave
Álvaro Enrigue revisits Spain’s conquest of Mexico through the eyes of Cortés, the conquistadors and the vanquished natives
Many chief executives say they are too busy to lose themselves in a book — but they could profit from liberating their imaginations
Imaginations run riot, with forays into the Arctic, distant dystopias, killer clones and Regency London
Enjoying a book at a leisurely pace teaches you to sharpen your attention and improves your understanding
Literary spectres, and the pandemic, hang over the Pulitzer winner’s latest novel, a tender chronicle of a family’s struggles
From an AI-guided future to scandals in the art world and new fiction from Rachel Cusk and Colm Tóibín, a preview of some of the titles to look out for in the coming year
The lives of two people in present-day Cornwall are connected to the dancing plague of 1518 in a novel full of mystery and wonder
French writer Johana Gustawsson’s first foray into Nordic crime is a twisty tale that uses the full gothic armoury
Two Santas, a rare watch and a break-in gone bad — a new fiction written exclusively for the FT by CIA officer turned bestselling author David McCloskey
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