A life in ...
-
The wild child author of Baise-Moi and former sex worker has completed a trilogy, Vernon Subutex, which has secured her renown as a ‘rock’n’roll Zola’
-
Between 2005 and 2009, more than 130 Mennonite women were drugged and raped by men in the community. In new novel Women Talking, the ex-Mennonite tells their story
-
She hadn’t read a crime novel before writing her debut at 45. Now, the author of Snap talks risk-taking, genre snobbery and not needing to know whodunnit
-
The books interview: As the stage adaptation of his Cicero trilogy transfers to the West End, Robert Harris explains why the Roman politician’s story speaks to our age of populism
-
The books interview: The Circle author talks about Facebook, why immigrants are not the enemy and his first novel for children
-
After writing novels on artificial intelligence, neuroscience and genetics, Powers’ has turned to trees. While on a hike through the Great Smoky Mountains, he talks about environmentalism and not having children
-
The books interview: After 12 novels and two film adaptations, is Meg Wolitzer about to become a household name? She talks the long game – and her timely new bestseller
-
The books interview: Her deeply personal first novel divided critics, her new one explores the choice not to have children. Sheila Heti talks about self-belief and the joy of failure
-
The books interview: Diana Evans’s new novel is a soulful portrait of family life as Obama came to power. She talks motherhood, her chair-buying habit and the ‘particular solitude’ of being a lone twin
-
As a reviewer, James Wood earned a fearsome reputation. With his own novel Upstate landing on critics’ desks, he talks about writing, family and his ‘buoyant’ disposition
-
The books interview: The critic and author of White Girls on the ‘endlessly fascinating and tiresome race subject’ and taking Rachel Weisz as his date to pick up his Pulitzer prize
-
Her murderous nanny thriller gripped France, winning its top literary prize and the attention of President Macron. With Lullaby now out in English, the author shares her thoughts on motherhood, #MeToo and being a Muslim in France
-
The TV adaptation of her dystopian classic The Handmaid’s Tale captured the political moment. Ahead of a new series, Atwood talks bestsellers, bonnets and the backlash against her views on #MeToo
-
The winner of the Costa children’s award on academia, adventure and her wild childhood in Zimbabwe
-
The novelist and screenwriter on Beckett, Nabokov and failing to finish a single one of the novels of Jane Austen
-
The author and illustrator on their long partnership and what Brexit would have meant for The Gruffalo
-
The former editor on regrets, the advantages of old age and why she’s still writing at 100
Gary Shteyngart: 'As a Queens boy, Trump was very impressive'