Book Review: Bright Eyed
/A new memoir about sleeplessness - and the wired culture that seems to encourage it
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A new memoir about sleeplessness - and the wired culture that seems to encourage it
Read MoreNow in paperback: a new rumination on the nature of the post-wildlife world mankind has built
Read MoreHilary Mantel's two famous novels have fueled the centuries-old curiosity about King Henry VIII's notorious minister Thomas Cromwell: was he a saint, Satan, or a civil servant? A magnificent new study attempts to sift fact from fiction
Read MoreThe effort of an eccentric earl to re-introduce wolves to England draws a zoologist back to the home she left years before
Read MoreThe steely matriarch of a wealthy family is losing both her health and her control over her family in this sharp debut novel by Sophie McManus
Read MoreNow in paperback, a groundbreaking study of Winston Churchill's life as a bestselling author, speechwriter, and speech performer
Read MorePenelope Devereux inspired a poet and may well have inspired a failed coup in Elizabethan England - and now she inspires a richly-detailed novel
Read MoreThe 1596 battle over Blackfriars Theatre was waged by a strong-willed Puritan woman who had a habit of picking fights, including with the Queen; a terrific new book tells the story at length for the first time
Read MoreIn time for the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo comes the concluding volume in Rory Muir's magisterial biography of the battle's victor, the Duke of Wellington
Read MoreThe enigmatic and compelling aristocratic author Vita Sackville-West is the subject of an approachable new biography
Read MoreMany new books - some excellent, some awful - are now seeking to explain the terrorist group ISIS, but the group's own origins dynamics are dauntingly complex. Greg Waldmann tries to make sense of it all.
Read MoreHausfrau is a grim addition to the array of contemporary novels exploring an old theme: women’s discontent. Rebecca Hussey reviews.
Read MoreHe shaped the morals and manners of a vast country and put an indelible stamp on the world's thinking, but he himself couldn't get the job he wanted. Robert Minto reviews a new history of Confucianism.
Read MoreIt has three hearts, eight tentacles, and a brain of startling and utterly alien complexity - it's the octopus, and a heartfelt book takes readers inside the cephalopod world.
Read MoreCelebrated biographer H. W. Brands has written the first full-dress of Ronald Reagan since the former president's death in 2004 - but does Reagan elude him, as he has so many biographers? Steve Donoghue reviews.
Read MoreIn Anna North's new novel, many narrative voices attempt to tell the story of film director Sophie Stark - but can any number of perspectives reveal an essentially unknowable character? Katie Gemmill reviews.
Read Morea poem
Read MoreThe ecstasy and anguish of falling in love have been the stuff of poetry for thousands of years - but do they boil down to the workings of serotonin, dopamine, and adrenaline? Jane Schmidt reviews a new look at romantic love.
Read MorePoet, dramatist, and author of the great Italian novel I promessi sposi, Alessandro Manzoni led a life as fascinating as his fiction. Luciano Mangiafico tells the story of the Father of Italian Prose.
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