Ho Sok Fong: Lake Like A Mirror review - an intoxicating collection

★★★★ HO SOK FONG: LAKE LIKE A MIRROR Nine short, disquieting stories from Malaysia

Nine short, disquieting stories from Malaysia, stunningly translated and masterfully written

“Truth was further from safety than two islands at opposite ends of the earth,” proclaims the narrator of ‘Lake Like A Mirror’, the titular short story in Ho Sok Fong’s intoxicating new collection.

John Grisham: The Guardians review - nail-bitingly good

A damning indictment of the American legal system from top crime novelist

Some two million Americans are currently in prison in America. A disproportionate number are black and nearly 200,000 are estimated to be innocent. John Grisham’s quietly horrifying new novel is a damning indictment of the inequities and corruption of the American legal system, which is shown to be not only corrupt but also profoundly inefficient and adept at making victims of those it incarcerates.

Robert Service: Kremlin Winter review – behind Putin's masks

Stalin’s biographer turns his attention to contemporary Russia and its enigmatic president

When U.S. president George W. Bush looked into the eyes of Vladimir Putin he famously “saw his soul”. In his latest meditation on modern Russia, Britain's top Kremlinologist Robert Service gets as close to the Russian president’s soul as may be possible in a scholarly account.

Ted Gioia: Music: A Subversive History review – an informative, giddying ride

★★★★ TED GIOIA: MUSIC - A SUBVERSIVE HISTORY An informative, giddying ride

A vast array of examples to support a convincing argument

People who derive comfort from Classic FM’s strapline that European classical music is “The World's Greatest Music" are going to have a major problem with this book. American music historian Ted Gioia has marshalled 25 years' worth of his own life and several centuries of music history into 500 pages which put that complacent assertion in doubt.

“The scope of this book is the full history of music,” he writes in his introduction. And his aim? "Above all, I hope to topple established hierarchies and rules, subverting tired old conventions and asserting bold new ones."

Book extract: Second-Hand Time by Svetlana Alexievich

Extract III of III - On Romeo and Juliet... Except Their Names Were Margarita and Abulfaz

Between 1991 to 2012, Belorussian journalist and oral historian Svetlana Alexievich travelled the countries that constituted the former USSR conducting interviews with the “the little great people” who had lived under Soviet communism and witnessed its demise. The resulting book, Second-Hand Time, is an oral history which tells through the words of ordinary people the end of what she, in her 2015 Nobel Prize lecture, called a “historical experiment”.

Book extract: Second-Hand Time by Svetlana Alexievich

BOOK EXTRACT: SECOND-HAND TIME BY SVETLANA ALEXIEVICH Extract II of III - On a Loneliness That Resembles Happiness

Extract II of III - On a Loneliness That Resembles Happiness

Between 1991 to 2012, Belorussian journalist and oral historian Svetlana Alexievich travelled the countries that constituted the former USSR conducting interviews with the “the little great people” who had lived under Soviet communism and witnessed its demise. The resulting book, Second-Hand Time, is an oral history which tells through the words of ordinary people the end of what she, in her 2015 Nobel Prize lecture, called a “historical experiment”.

Book extract: Second-Hand Time by Svetlana Alexievich

Extract I of III - A Man's Story

Between 1991 to 2012, Belorussian journalist and oral historian Svetlana Alexievich travelled the countries that constituted the former USSR conducting interviews with the “the little great people” who had lived under Soviet communism and witnessed its demise. The resulting book, Second-Hand Time, is an oral history which tells through the words of ordinary people the end of what she, in her 2015 Nobel Prize lecture, called a “historical experiment”.

Caroline Moorehead: A House in the Mountains review – the women's war against Fascism

★★★★★ CAROLINE MOOREHEAD: A HOUSE IN THE MOUNTAINS Uplifting and horrifying stories of the Italian Resistance and its heroines

Uplifting, and horrifying, stories of the Italian Resistance and its heroines

In September 1944, a heavily pregnant Resistance activist in the north of German-occupied Italy was arrested on a visit to Milan. Lisetta Giua, a law student and fiancée of the Jewish anti-Fascist chief Vittorio Foa, worked as one of hundreds of women staffette: vital underground operatives whose roles might stretch from courier and spy to liaison officer and saboteur.

Irenosen Okojie: Nudibranch review - daring and surreal

★★★ IRENOSEN OKOJIE: NUDIBRANCH A bold and inventive collection of short stories

A bold and inventive collection of short stories nourished on the darkest of thoughts

Visceral, gaudy, alien, otherworldly to the point of being almost improbably imaginative, the nudibranch serves as an appropriate figure for Nigerian-British writer Irenosen Okojie’s muscularly surrealist prose. Look up a picture of one if you haven’t before: the nudibranch is an exuberant, kaleidoscopic variety of sea slug.

Julian Barnes: The Man in the Red Coat review – all that glitters…

Barnes reveals the dark undercurrents of high society in Paris and London during the Belle Époque with typical élan

“Chauvinism is the worst form of ignorance” is the maxim of Dr Pozzi, the hero of Julian Barnes’s latest book, The Man in the Red Coat. This historical biography follows the life of a renowned gynaecologist during the Parisian Belle Époque, the “locus classicus of peace and pleasure, with more than a flush of decadence”.