Maggie O’Farrell is chargeable for a few of my largest COVID cries (spectacular, taking into consideration how hotly contested that class is). Hamnet hit house with its uncanny parallels to pandemic existence with shuttered playhouses, quarantines and households separated by way of sickness. The movie adaptation, launched closing 12 months to super acclaim, offered me with every other emotional outpouring. This time on the powerhouse efficiency from Jessie Buckley, whose grieving maternal howls made me recoil – however by no means glance away.
Do you prefer studying books that make you cry?
Watts Gallery – Artists’ Village/Wikimedia/Tinder Press
O’Farrell’s new novel seems to be set to go away an similarly devastating influence. Land follows mapmaker Tomás and his eldest son Liam, charting the land within the aftermath of the good famine in 1860s Eire. It’s a circle of relatives saga spanning centuries and continents, impressed by way of O’Farrell’s actual great-great-grandfather, who labored for Ordnance Survey.
Our reviewer described the unconventional as “exquisite” and “haunting”. Knowledgeable within the famine, he was once inspired by way of the best way O’Farrell charted a land that was once “changed utterly. A whole way of life was eroded, and Land imagines what it must have been like to walk among the ruins, to see an agrarian culture collapse, and, for those left behind, to forge a future from remnants”.
Land is in bookshops now.
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Good non-fiction

Picador
Writing about main pop figures comes with an inherent stress: there’s no scarcity of urge for food for brand spanking new subject material, however the problem is to keep away from merely retreading what we already know. George Michael fanatics might be happy to grasp that Sathnam Sanghera avoids this entice along with his new ebook, This night the Track Turns out So Loud.
Phase biography, section love letter, section social observation, it’s an try to proper a really perfect cultural forgetting of Michael’s skills – so steadily overshadowed by way of the singer’s private existence. As Sanghera issues out, a lot of his songs have been single-handedly “written, produced, arranged and performed” by way of Michael, who demonstrated an bizarre vary and intensity of artistry and innovation throughout his occupation.
This night the Track Turns out So Loud is in bookshops now
The Ladies’s prize for non-fiction celebrates excellence, originality and accessibility in narrative non-fiction written by way of ladies. In simplest its 3rd 12 months, the 2026 shortlist covers a spread of subjects as various because the mavens we’ve enlisted to check them, inspecting issues from creativity and wellbeing to warfare and circle of relatives ties.

Ladies’s Prize
I will’t wait to get my palms on a replica of Mom Mary Involves Me by way of Arundhati Roy. A “literary memorial” paying tribute to her courting along with her mom, it’s Roy’s 3rd ebook. Her first, God of Small Issues, is one in every of my favorite novels of all time.
The Ladies’s prize for non-fiction books are out now
One concept ruled when our reviewers got here out of a press screening of the newest A24 horror flick, Backrooms closing week: “How on earth is this only rated a 15!?”
Failed architect Clark (Chiwetel Ejiofor) by chance slips out of fact and finally ends up trapped in an unending labyrinth of yellow-tinted rooms, buzzing fluorescent lighting and eerie, disembodied sounds – the “Backrooms”. Impressed by way of the viral web horror clips, the concern issue is derived from simply how a lot Clark’s nightmarish portal has in commonplace with the sector of recent paintings.
Moviegoers will (expectantly) by no means in finding themselves trapped in a nauseatingly jaundiced and endless labyrinth. However they are going to recognise Clark’s enjoy of residing amongst failed guarantees, diminishing aspirations, precarity, social isolation and the rising worry of changing into out of date.
Backrooms is in cinemas now.
Extra unsettling scenes are on display at British Landscapes: A Sense of Position at Pallant Area Gallery in Chichester. The exhibition lines the evolution of panorama portray during the last 300 years. Amongst them are Paul Nash’s disconcerting, sepia-toned landscapes painted within the aftermath of the primary global conflict. He’d served as a conflict artist and emerged from the warfare made up our minds to seize nation-state stripped naked by way of fight. He’s amongst a number of artists on display who grew to become to the nation-state after the conflict, seeking to seize its disappearing persona and maintain a way of what was once being misplaced.
My favorite paintings on show is Cerne Abbas Massive by way of Eric Ravilious (1939). Noticed via barbed twine, the landmark is rendered in earth browns to mirror how it was once turfed over to forestall it performing as a landmark for the Luftwaffe.
British Landscapes: A Sense of Position is on the Pallant Area Gallery till November 1 2026.
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