World on Fire, BBC One, series finale review - may this fine war drama fight on

★★★★ WORLD ON FIRE, BBC ONE Peter Bowker's ambitious series ended on a cliffhanger

Peter Bowker's ambitious series ended on a cliffhanger, with viewers waiting to learn its fate

A bit like all those people on the home front in 1940 (but only a little bit), we sit and nervously wait for news. Is World on Fire (BBC One) still listed among the living? Or even now is someone typing up the letter and sticking it in a brown envelope? “Fell bravely in the field … did its country proud etc…” Please may this ambitious Sunday-night drama live to fight another day?

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.

Svetlana Alexievich: Last Witnesses: Unchildlike Stories review - anything but childish

★★★ SVETLANA ALEXIEVICH: LAST WITNESSES Haunting recollections of the German invasion of the USSR through the eyes of children

Haunting recollections of the German invasion of the USSR through the eyes of children

Svetlana Alexievich’s Last Witnesses: Unchildlike Stories is a collection of oral testimonies conducted between 1978-2004 with Soviet and post-Soviet citizens who were children during the second world war. They recount strange and terrible experiences which — even as adults — retain the force and candour of childhood memory.

Vasily Grossman: Stalingrad review - a Soviet national epic

★★★★★ VASILY GROSSMAN: STALINGRAD A Soviet national epic

The prequel to 'Life and Fate' is a monumental panorama of a people at war

Stalingrad is the companion piece to Vasily Grossman’s Life and Fate, which on its (re)publication in English a decade ago was acclaimed as one of the greatest Russian (and not only Russian) novels of the 20th century.

Blu-ray: The Night of the Generals

Peter O’Toole and Omar Sharif star in pedestrian Nazi-infested 1960s murder mystery

Anatole Litvak’s The Night of the Generals (1967), beautifully restored here to 4K, is a tortuous and at times entertaining mash-up of the July 1944 plot to kill Hitler and the murder of a prostitute in Nazi-occupied Warsaw a few years earlier.

Small Island, National Theatre review - fun epic takes ages to warm up

★★★ SMALL ISLAND, NATIONAL THEATRE Fun epic takes ages to warm up

Stage version of Andrea Levy's classic Windrush story is too pedestrian

Novelist Andrea Levy's 2004 masterpiece, Small Island, is a tribute to the Windrush Generation, those migrants to England from the Caribbean that came first on the HMT Empire Windrush in 1948, and then subsequently on other ships. Being British citizens by right, the discrimination that they faced in the postwar years, which culminated in the 2018 Windrush Scandal, when so many of them have been denied their legal and human rights, is a stain on recent history.