Search results
Your Lie in April at the Harold Pinter Theatre review: glib, mawkish and riddled with clichés
Evening Standard· 12 hours ago2/5 This stage version of Naoshi Arakawa’s popular manga series is unlikely to replicate the success...
I’m a July 4 baby and always loved fireworks. An unexpected conversation changed my perspective |...
CNN.com· 4 days agoThe idea that I burst into the world during the event’s finale is a bit of family lore I’ve always...
What is the origin of the word 'Bible'?
Christian Today· 6 days agoHow we get the word 'Bible' is tied to the history of the Bible itself. The word Bible is indirectly derived from the Greek word for papyrus. Papyrus was...
30 Biggest Dos and Don’ts When Buying a Car
GOBankingRates via Yahoo Finance UK· 1 day agoBuying a new car is stressful no matter how many times you've done it before. From figuring out your budget to finding the right car to wrapping up all...
Romance Bookstores Are Booming, Dishing ‘All the Hot Stuff You Can Imagine’
New York Times· 2 days agoIf their success was daunting, it also suggested that there might be room for another romance store....
The best books of 2024 so far: writers and critics choose their favourite reads
The Irish Times· 3 days agoThe best spy novel of the year so far is Oliver Harris’s The Shame Archive, which deals with the...
Una Mannion wins Gold Dagger Award
The Irish Times· 3 days agoIn The Irish Times this Saturday, Austin Duffy tells John Self about his Troubles novel Cross and combining careers as a doctor and a writer. Poet...
In “Russian Gothic,” a Veteran’s Paranoia and Delirium Reflect a Nation’s
New York Times· 2 days agoBoris Fishman’s new novel, “The Unwanted,” will be published next year. In 1979, the Soviet Union...
‘Radical’, ‘a headrush’, ‘insanely clever’: the best Australian books out in July
The Guardian· 5 days agoAgainst this backdrop, Finegan Kruckemeyer’s debut novel is a startlingly optimistic work, a fable about making families and communities, about the practices that bring people together as the ...
Why Are You Shouting? by James Womack review – tales of the metropolis
The Guardian· 6 days agoJames Womack’s latest collection sees the city as both muse and antagonist. “The city is dead, and yes, the country too, / and probably, beyond, the grey wide world,” he declares in ...