Category : Search result: Pakistani novel


Tom Gauld's 2025 Best Conspiracy Books Cartoon

Cartoonist Tom Gauld offers his witty, illustrated take on the most notable conspiracy theory books published in 2025. Discover the year's most talked-about titles through his unique artistic lens.

The Names: The Standout Debut Novel of 2025

Discover why Florence Knapp's debut novel 'The Names' is a future classic. A gripping sliding doors story about how a single choice echoes for decades. Find out more and get your copy.

Atkinson's Revolutionary War books become graphic novels

Pulitzer-winning historian Rick Atkinson's acclaimed Revolutionary War trilogy is being adapted into a series of graphic editions. Discover how this project aims to bring history to new audiences ahead of the UK's 250th anniversary.

Booker Winner Ignites Masculinity Debate

David Szalay's Booker-winning novel 'Flesh' sparks crucial conversation about modern masculinity, toxic behaviour, and its reflection in contemporary literature.

Beasts of the Sea: A hypnotic tale of extinction

Iida Turpeinen's mesmerising novel 'Beasts of the Sea' resurrects the tragic story of the Steller's sea cow in a powerful ecological lament that speaks to our current climate crisis.

Dark Social Media Thriller: Other People's Fun

A chilling exploration of modern envy and revenge in the age of curated perfection. Harriet Lane's latest novel delivers a darkly comic masterpiece that will make you rethink every picture-perfect post.

Danielewski's 1200-page Western 'Tom's Crossing'

The literary mastermind behind 'House of Leaves' unveils his monumental new work - a genre-bending Western that promises to redefine storytelling. Discover the ambitious novel 16 years in the making.

Gurnah's Theft: Coming-of-Age in Tanzania

Nobel laureate Abdulrazak Gurnah returns with a powerful audiobook exploring identity, displacement and moral choices in 1960s Tanzania through the eyes of a young student.

Farage apologises for false grooming gangs claim

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage issues public apology after falsely stating that 'the vast majority' of grooming gang convictions were British-Pakistani men, following legal action threat from research centre.

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