
If you only read one book this year … make it this one!
James was being hailed a modern classic and a 'masterpiece' before it even hit bookshops last year. US novelist Percival Everett, the author of more than 30 published works, dared to take on the American cultural cornerstone that Hemingway described as 'the best book we've had', Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – only this time from the perspective of the runaway enslaved man, Jim. Everett rescues James from the racial stereotypes of the original, restoring his proper name and humanity. He might not be free, but Everett gives him narrative agency and a pencil with which to write his own story.
Don't worry if this is your first proper encounter with Huck. James has all the pace and adventure of the children's classic, but with adult wit, wisdom and furious intent. 'I hope that I have written the novel that Twain did not,' Everett has said. James is an important novel and also a magnificently enjoyable one. And, handily, it is newly out in paperback. Lisa Allardice, the Guardian's chief books writer
A very short novel that contains multitudes. A young Russian composer flees Moscow, heading for Ukraine, desperate to escape Stalin's purge of intellectuals in 1941. Then Russia's war with Nazi Germany begins and his life turns upside down. How will he survive? What means and reserves of character does he have at his disposal? Profound, moving, haunting – full of resonances that are even more valid in today's fraught times. A mini-masterpiece. William Boyd, novelist
This novel is the debut of Child's legendary hero: army veteran turned drifter and one-man A-team, Jack Reacher. It is a page-turning delight, a relentless rollercoaster of action and twists that grip you by the throat from the get-go. This book has mystery, danger, conspiracy, adrenaline-pumping action and a larger-than-life hero that you can't help rooting for. In short, it's everything you'd want in a thriller. Go on, dive in! Abir Mukherjee, novelist
Last year when I judged the Booker prize, my fellow judges and I picked this novel as our winner. It's a short read, but a beautifully expansive one, offering a perspective that is epic yet intimate, heartbreaking yet awe-inspiring. It reminded me how fleeting life is, but how much each moment can hold. I've never read anything like it. Sara Collins, novelist
I'm not usually a fantasy reader, but Yarros's smash-hit romantasy novel got me out of a reading slump very successfully. It has everything you need to keep you gripped: romance, action, adventure and more dragons than you could ever dream of. It's one of my go-to recommendations at the shop now, whether the customer is a fantasy fan or not. Almost without fail, everyone who has picked a copy up has come back raving about it! Ben Johns, co-owner of Simply Books in Stockport
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One book? As a literary editor whose leisure time is as dominated by reading as my working life, it seems an impossible ask. But one recent title immediately sprang to mind: the Australian author Richard Flanagan's Question 7. It's a unique blend of memoir, history, science and philosophical thought experiment, with the structural cunning, propulsive energy and imaginative beauty of a gripping novel. It hinges on the contingencies of fate: were it not for Hiroshima, Flanagan's father would have perished in a Japanese PoW camp, and he would never have been born. From here, the book opens like a concertina to consider the strange genesis of nuclear weapons, Tasmania's shameful colonial story, his own family line, and a brush with death – thrillingly told – that upended his sense of self. Weaving together imagination and history, Flanagan profoundly conveys how all our lives are an 'ongoing invention'. It's a book that will stay with you for ever. Justine Jordan, the Guardian's fiction editor
Cora is a crime-scene cleaner, but her job doesn't bother her, not when she's witnessed her sister's murder. With the killer at large, nobody can reach Cora: not her aunt who's preparing for the Hungry Ghost festival, not her weird colleagues, and especially not the shadow nibbling at her coffee table. Haunted by the taunt 'bat eater' and a series of killings in Chinatown, Cora believes someone is targeting east Asian women, and something might be targeting her. Folk-horror meets crime thriller in a witty, gory, genre-defying novel that takes readers on an exploration of Chinese-American heritage while observing the racism rampant in New York during Covid-19. Brooke Smith, bookseller at House of Books & Friends in Manchester
Something about this book really shook me. Sure, it has similarities to Cormac McCarthy's The Road and Mad Max: Fury Road, and it is another cli-fi book, but it manages to be completely its own thing. Mostly because Tim Winton is a deeply humane writer, concerned with moments of connection across divides, with a deep care for nature and an impossibly hopeful desire for humanity to succeed, together. A farmer escorts a child across a dystopian Australia ravaged by the fallout of climate collapse. And when they are captured, the farmer, in order to stay alive, spends one night telling his captor his life story. For sure, we can expect eco-revenge-military cells, tragic love, extreme weather and epic heists, but we also have something deeper: the power of a single story that can change the course of the world. Nikesh Shukla, author and screenwriter
Every bookseller knows that no book is meant for everyone – but for anyone who is in a reading rut, Elif Shafak novels are a pretty reliable way of getting unstuck! One of our great storytellers, you could start anywhere in her oeuvre and find a page-turning, plot-driven, politically prescient book that will strike a slightly different chord with every reader. Her latest is a propulsive work of ecofiction that spans Dickensian London and contemporary Kurdistan: River Thames to River Tigris. It's riveting, readable, complex and quietly queer, with characters to fall completely in love with – rich and escapist. Mairi Oliver, owner of Lighthouse Bookshop in Edinburgh
Black British Lives Matter is a collection of essays from a selection of experts and public figures, sharing their insights and experiences from the perspective of being Black in modern Britain. At a time when efforts towards equality and anti-racism are being questioned and even threatened, books such as this are not simply nice-to-haves; they are essential. Written with clarity and passion, the essays in this book (including Sir David Adjaye, Nadine White, David Olusoga and Baroness Doreen Lawerence) offer a context for understanding racism while illuminating vital truths about contemporary society, that we can all benefit from. Jeffrey Boakye, author and broadcaster
All titles listed are available from the Guardian bookshop
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Meredith Kercher's family lawyer slams 'disrespectful' Amanda Knox after new series
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She previously revealed that she's always seen herself as something of a revolutionary. 'I've always pushed boundaries,' she said on the Black Spin Global podcast earlier this year. 'I've always been outspoken about racial hate I get online, bodyshaming. I'm very open about a lot of stuff. 'I'm still playing tennis, my career is still going but I also want to do things outside of tennis. I'm starting to explore more opportunities on social media.' 'Obviously there are levels to OnlyFans, you have athletes like Nick [Kyrgios] and Alex [Muller] who are going to be posting tennis content for the most part and then you have the other complete extreme, which I'm not. I'm in that middle gap,' she added. 'I set it up in January and it just took off. Being a tennis player definitely helped my marketing. I'm at a stage where I don't do the absolute most on there but I'm comfortable as I need to be. I'm doing really well. 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Vickery, whose father Rawle is a former soccer player and brother Dominque Mitchell played football at South Carolina State, turned professional in 2011 after training with USTA and Mouratoglou Academy in France. But her career peaked back in 2018, when she managed a career-high ranking of World No 73. Now, the Florida native has slumped to No 559, without a single victory to her name. She failed to qualify for the Australian Open in January, stumbling in the third round of qualifying, and skipped Roland Garros and Wimbledon all together. However, she appears to save her best performances for the US Open with her best Grand Slam record coming in New York. She's made the second round of the tournament four times. Vickery is far from the first tennis player to have flirted with an alternate career on the x-rated website to fund their tennis ambitions. 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