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Classics corner

  • MY BRILLIANT CAREER

    My Brilliant Career by Miles Franklin – review

    Miles Franklin's 1901 debut novel remains an insightful exploration of class, gender and youthful frustration, writes Anita Sethi
  • Roberto Arlt

    The Mad Toy by Roberto Arlt – review

    Roberto Arlt's 1926 tale follows the fortunes of a young crook struggling to find salvation in Buenos Aires. By Anthony Cummins
  • Wilkie Collins

    The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins

    Eliot and Chesterton were among the fans of Wilkie Collins's 'perfect' prototype detective, says Lettie Ransley
  • Picture taken in July 1936 during the Sp

    The Life and Death of the Spanish Republic by Henry Buckley – review

    Henry Buckley offered the best contemporary account of the Spanish civil war, writes Giles Tremlett
  • maya angelou

    I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou – review

    The first volume of Maya Angelou's autobiography is proof of her inner strength and a testament to the power of words, writes Anita Sethi
  • CS Lewis

    A Grief Observed by CS Lewis – review

    CS Lewis's meditation on the death of his wife is a powerful record of raw emotion, writes Lettie Ransley
  • iris murdoch in 1978

    The Sea, the Sea by Iris Murdoch – review

    The 1978 Booker prize-winning novel, featuring a theatre director who retires to the coast to write his memoirs, is a rich and textured study of vanity and self-delusion, says Sophia Martelli

  • Barbara Comyns

    Sisters By a River; Our Spoons Came from Woolworths; The Vet's Daughter by Barbara Comyns – review

    Barbara Comyns's world is weird and wonderful. For Lucy Scholes, she's a neglected genius
  • Janet Malcolm

    Reading Chekhov: A Critical Journey by Janet Malcolm – review

    Janet Malcolm's literary journey in the footsteps of Chekhov is affectionate and insightful, writes Simon Hammond
  • John Mortimer

    Collected Stories of Rumpole by John Mortimer – review

    Rumpole was conceived for the screen, but John Mortimer's enduring comic creation is a joy on the page, too, writed Natasha Tripney
  • Elizabeth Harrower
author

    The Watch Tower by Elizabeth Harrower – review

    Elizabeth Harrower’s tale of a cruel and oppressive marriage is a forgotten gem of Australian literature, writes Anita Sethi
  • Author John Williams

    Stoner by John Williams – review

    John Williams's Stoner might have unremarkable subject matter, but it is so beautifully rendered that it's no surprise to see it getting a second chance almost half a century after publication, writes Simon Hammond
  • Portrait Franz Kafka

    The Man Who Disappeared by Franz Kafka – review

    A new translation of Kafka's first, unfinished novel is strong on social comedy and satire, writes Anthony Cummins
  • Henry James

    Letters From the Palazzo Barbaro by Henry James – review

    This collection of letters written during Henry James's stays in Venice reveals the author's intense desire to remain an outsider, writes Ivan Juritz
  • nihad sirees silence roar

    The Silence and the Roar by Nihad Sirees – review

    A translation of Nihad Sirees's allegory of his native Syria could not be more timely, writes Ben East
  • Portrait of Charles Baudelaire

    Fanfarlo by Charles Baudelaire – review

    Baudelaire's autobiographical novella paints an intriguing picture of himself as a young dandy, writes Natasha Tripney

  • John Berger

    G by John Berger – review

    John Berger's 1972 Booker prize-winning novel rewards serious reading, says Anthony Cummins

  • Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald

    Tales of the Jazz Age/ All the Sad Young Men by F Scott Fitzgerald – review

    These two collections of F Scott Fitzgerald's short stories, written only a few years apart, could not be more different, writes Simon Hammond
  • Portrait of American novelist Thornton Wilder

    The Cabala by Thornton Wilder – review

    Thornton Wilder's 1926 debut novel is a love song for individuals whose mystery is proportionate to their wealth, writes Lettie Ransley
  • Sketches of Spain by Federico García Lorca – review

    Federico García Lorca's first collection of writings shines a fascinating light on early-20th-century Spain, writes Mina Holland
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