Support the Guardian

Fund independent journalism with £5 per month

Bookmarks
Editor's picks
Books quiz  
Can you beat the authors? Take the bumper books quiz of 2023!
Can you beat the authors? Take the bumper books quiz of 2023!
Cosy crime  
Perfect escapism: why cosy crime stories are a Christmas essential
Perfect escapism: why cosy crime stories are a Christmas essential
The books of my life  
Bob Mortimer: ‘I wanted to write like Murakami but soon realised I didn’t have the talent’
Bob Mortimer: ‘I wanted to write like Murakami but soon realised I didn’t have the talent’
Short story  
Yankee Swap: a short story by the Booker-nominated author Jonathan Escoffery
Yankee Swap: a short story by the Booker-nominated author Jonathan Escoffery
Fiction in translation  
The best recent translated fiction – review roundup
The best recent translated fiction – review roundup
Audiobook of the week  
A Stroke of the Pen by Terry Pratchett audiobook review – brimming with wit
A Stroke of the Pen by Terry Pratchett audiobook review – brimming with wit
Books of the week
Mistletoe Malice by Kathleen Farrell review – a snarky stocking filler
Mistletoe Malice by Kathleen Farrell review – a snarky stocking filler
This witty postwar classic about a terrible family Christmas raises a bitter cocktail to the festive season
Becoming a Composer by Errollyn Wallen review – from Belize to the Proms
Wallen’s patchwork of notes, essays and diary entries tells the story of how she became one of the world’s most performed living composers
Innards by Magogodi oaMphela Makhene review – a stunning Sowetan debut
Tales of heartbreak and horror in the South African township explore the legacy of life under apartheid
Lou Reed: The King of New York by Will Hermes review – beauty and the beast
Genius, queer pioneer, influencer: a vivid new biography presents rock’s poet of the shadow self for a new generation
The Britannias by Alice Albinia review – our island story
Autobiography is interwoven with dreams of island matriarchies in this exploration of the British archipelago
Spotlight
Should we go to more parties?
The big idea  
Should we go to more parties?
Talking to strangers can be intimidating, but the social whirl has science on its side
Talking points and news
Murder mystery puzzle book Murdle tops UK Christmas bestseller chart
Murder mystery puzzle book Murdle tops UK Christmas bestseller chart
GT Karber’s book of challenges beats Richard Osman’s The Last Devil to Die and Guinness World Records to top spot
Tolkien and CS Lewis manuscripts among treasures made available to public in 2023
Spitting Image puppets and Barbara Hepworth works also donated via Acceptance in Lieu and Cultural Gifts schemes
Mills & Boon launch ‘spicy’ Afterglow series to woo TikTok book lovers
Romance publisher to launch two ‘trend-led books’ a month, with ‘generous dose of spice in every story’
Copyright claim against Tolkien estate backfires on Lord of the Rings fanfiction author
Demetrious Polychron ordered to destroy all copies of The Fellowship of the King after claiming Amazon prequel infringed his copyright
Freud exhibition delves into a dramatic legacy in Latin America
Early and enduring adoption of Freudian psychoanalysis puts paid to view of it being a European practice
Five years and 2m copies later, self-published author lands UK book deal
Norfolk-based crime writer JM Dalgliesh topped the Amazon and Kindle bestsellers before being signed by a traditional publisher
From the archive
The 10 best Christmases in literature
Literary Christmas  
The 10 best Christmases in literature
From a charming scene in War and Peace to Kingsley Amis’s depiction of a ghastly crew of septuagenarians, Kate Kellaway picks the best Christmases in literature
Get in touch
If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email newsletters@theguardian.com
 

Marina Hyde

Guardian columnist

Person Image

Hello to you, dear reader!

When the former Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha delivered his New Year message back in 1967, he pulled the cord marked “truth bomb”. “This year will be harder than last year,” he declared. “It will, however, be easier than next year.” I mean … on the one hand: thanks for not sugar-coating it, Enver. On the other: way to kill the party buzz, you monster!

I don’t want to murder the atmosphere (or indeed any dissidents) by reminding you of the news year you’ve just lived through – or by warning you of the news year you’re about to live through. It’s not big, it’s not clever, and it’s sure as heck not seasonal.

But I will say, pointedly, that our reporting feels particularly necessary in dark times – even if we have had only one prime minister this year.

If you can, please help support the Guardian, so as to keep it open for everyone. I can’t tell you how much it would be appreciated. A free press is needed now as much as it has ever been – and on some days, more than it has ever been.

In return for this support, I am formally* bestowing upon you the right to refer to yourself – in conversation, in the pub, and on any business cards you may care to have printed up – as “a newspaper baron”. Face it: if you pay to support a news organisation, then you ARE to all intents and purposes a newspaper baron. Just enjoy it! All the others do.

With that, it simply remains is for me to wish you a very happy holidays, and a splendid new year. Goodness knows you’ve earned it.

*not formally

 
You are receiving this email because you are a subscriber to Bookmarks. Guardian News & Media Limited - a member of Guardian Media Group PLC. Registered Office: Kings Place, 90 York Way, London, N1 9GU. Registered in England No. 908396