Truth's a Dog Must to Kennel, Battersea Arts Centre review - King Lear goes virtual

★★★★ TRUTH'S A DOG MUST TO KENNEL, BATTERSEA ARTS CENTRE King Lear goes virtual 

Tim Crouch’s latest show intriguingly deconstructs theatre in a post-truth world

Has theatre’s time passed? In Tim Crouch’s latest 70-minute show, first staged at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh last year and now at Battersea Arts Centre (BAC) in south London, the nature of live performance is interrogated by this innovative and imaginative theatre-maker, with a little help from a virtual reality headset and William Shakespeare.

Science Fiction: Voyage to the Edge of the Imagination, Science Museum review - travel to a galaxy not so far away

SCIENCE FICTION: VOYAGE TO THE EDGE OF THE IMAGINATION, SCIENCE MUSEUM Travel to a galaxy not so far away 

The glitzy Science Museum show fails to impress, but its accompanying book inspires

Scenes that stay in the mind: Arnold Schwarzenegger as the Terminator peeling back the skin on his forearm to reveal the gleaming machinery within; a beady-eyed, new-born Alien bursting from John Hurt’s abdomen; that all-species bar in Star Wars; the spaceship’s long-awaited descent in Close Encounters.

Amalie Smith: Thread Ripper review - the tangled web we weave

★★★★★ AMALIE SMITH: THREAD RIPPER AI meets Penelope meets Ada Lovelace in this meditation on text, tissue and textile

AI meets Penelope meets Ada Lovelace in this meditation on text, tissue and textile

Sitting in the park on a hot summer’s day, life began to imitate art. I had been soaking up the sun’s now overpowering rays for over an hour and was beginning to feel its radiating effects.

Golden green filaments of grass moved back, the trees swayed in heady sympathetic succession; buzzing from the outside in, my body started to metabolise light at a speed my brain couldn’t fathom. My skin bubbled green, my tongue unfurled petals and my eyes sprouted luminous buds. I had become a plant – or so I felt – and the sun-soaked synthesis of my transformation was near complete.

Philip Ball: The Book of Minds review - thinking about the box

Mapping the mindspace of all beings great and small

Years ago, one of the leading mathematicians in the country tried to explain to me what his real work was like. When he was on the case, he said, he could be doing a range of other things – having his morning shave, making coffee, walking to a meeting – but all the time, “I am holding the problem in my mind”.

Prehistoric Planet, Apple TV+ review - David Attenborough presents life on earth, 66 million years ago

★★★★ PREHISTORIC PLANET, APPLE TV+ David Attenborough presents life on earth, 66 million years ago: technology brings dinosaurs to life in microscopic detail

Technology brings dinosaurs to life in microscopic detail

With Jurassic World: Dominion due in June, which will mark the end of the “Jurassic” movie franchise, here’s Apple TV’s alternative, science-based history of dinosaurs and their world. It’s produced by Jon Favreau, a key player in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and narrated by David Attenborough in his trademark “Whispering Dave” style.

Stuart Jeffries: Everything, All the Time, Everywhere - How We Became Post-Modern review - entertaining origin-story for the world of today

★★★ STUART JEFFRIES: EVERYTHING, ALL THE TIME, EVERYWHERE Entertaining origin-story for the world of today

The author of 'Grand Hotel Abyss' covers everything from Margaret Thatcher and Sid Vicious, to Jean Baudrillard and Grand Theft Auto

In his 1985 essay “Not-Knowing”, the American writer Donald Barthelme describes a fictional situation in which an unknown “someone” is writing a story.

Sam Riviere: Dead Souls review – whip-smart literary satire with a techno tinge

★★★★ SAM RIVIERE: DEAD SOULS Whip-smart literary satire with a techno tinge

A poet-turned-novelist hunts for the real thing in an age of fakes

In 1992 Martin Amis published a story, “Career Move”, in which the writers of sensational screenplays with titles like Decimator and Offensive from Qasar 13 read their work to empty rooms in shabby pubs. Meanwhile, wealthy and fêted poets pen verses entitled “Composed at – Castle” or “To Sophonisba Anguiscola” and their agents immediately juggle megabuck offers from LA: “In poetry, first class was something you didn't need to think about. It wasn’t discussed.

Kazuo Ishiguro: Klara and the Sun review - what makes us human?

★★★★ KAZUO ISHIGURO: KLARA AND THE SUN What makes us human?

A gentle tale of 'Artificial Friends', a robot's love and the human heart

Unsettling, unremitting and psychologically stark, Klara and the Sun has all the hallmarks of a traditional Ishiguro novel. Dealing with his familiar themes of loss and love and the question of what makes us human, the book follows the "life" of an Artificial Friend (AF) called Klara, taken from her store of robot compatriots and left to navigate the complex world of human emotions.