The Brazilian family who died of heartbreak – or did they?
The debut novel by the late Victor Heringer, at last appearing in English, is a witty, restless tale, albeit one rough around the edges
![Glória, by the late Victor Heringer, is set in Rio de Janeiro](https://cdn.statically.io/img/www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/books/2024/07/10/TELEMMGLPICT000385071802_17206122577360_trans_NvBQzQNjv4Bqvm_8s-puWb6m_GKwsH19uG2wSXF_z1YkFlGPzjBtMoE.jpeg?imwidth=350)
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The debut novel by the late Victor Heringer, at last appearing in English, is a witty, restless tale, albeit one rough around the edges
The prize-winning author on the ‘twee’ ways we talk about death – and why it feels ‘uncomfortable to be English pretty much anywhere’
Eccentric collectors, the eye-watering price of a first edition Fleming and what to buy for beginners
Marlowe was visionary, clever and had a humanity that could cut you to the quick. It’s time he stepped out from his contemporary’s shadow
Who said comics have to be comic? This year’s crop gave us haunted spas, apocalyptic visions – and the beauty of pastoral France
This Christmas, young readers can look forward to tales of His Majesty, three wily monkeys and a sumptuous reimagining of Peter Pan
Looking for a Christmas present for the music-lover in your life? Try Johnny Cash's lyrics, Sly Stone's memoir or Paul McCartney's snapshots
Our top thinkers turned the quest for hard truths into a mind-blowing funride
Year two of the war produced breathless tales of resistance, rebuttals to Russian propaganda, and the death of a promising young writer
This year, marriage went under the microscope in engrossing tales of mutual obsession, catastrophic union and doublethink
The Tory meltdown was a sign of the fractious spirit of the times. But consensus is possible – here are our politics picks of the year
In the 16 best poetry books of the year, readers meet Shakespeare's wife and Chekhov's sisters, a French comte and a wild London hyena
Rare Singles, a lively and good-natured new novel by Benjamin Myers, brings an ageing US soul singer together with an English superfan
From a drunken Hemingway to reprisals against ‘collaboratrices horizontales’, Patrick Bishop offers a gripping account of de Gaulle’s return
In Coming of Age, Lucy Foulkes explains why teenagers should be allowed to take risks – and shouldn’t be overprotected
Jen Hadfield’s memoir, Storm Pegs, immerses us in Shetland’s wild life, from slimy sea molluscs to grand island vistas
From cosy crime to moving memoirs, our critics pick the perfect holiday reading, whatever your tastes
The prize-winning author on the ‘twee’ ways we talk about death – and why it feels ‘uncomfortable to be English pretty much anywhere’
Rare Singles, a lively and good-natured new novel by Benjamin Myers, brings an ageing US soul singer together with an English superfan
The actor and China Miéville have co-written The Book of Elsewhere, about an immortal warrior’s travails. Netflix is already adapting it
In Sarah Merrett’s thrilling debut, The Others, set in 1900, a young boy loses his astronomer grandmother – and finds a wounded alien
The Fun We Had, a beautiful, gentle, rhyming story by Charissa Coulthard, sees a little girl visit her elderly grandmother, and reminisce
Time Runs like a River, Emma Carlisle’s latest book, uses gentle illustrations and lilting rhymes to foster a surprisingly deep message
Mayowa and the Sea of Words, Chibundu Onuzo’s debut novel, about a girl who takes on a Right-wing MP, sacrifices plot to preaching
How to Be a Genius Kid, by ‘Waldo Pancake’ (Jim Smith), sees two cartoon narrators whisk us through eight fascinating lessons
The Wonderdays, by Clare Povey, has a solid villain, a daring journey and a sensible, albeit overly emphatic, eco-message
In Mary Cathleen Brown’s haunting debut novel, The Tall Man, a 12-year-old boy must solve an old mystery and save an imprisoned child
‘Hyperbole’, ‘harried’, ‘onomatopoeia’ – Colossal Words for Kids, by Colette Hiller and Tor Freeman, will have clever young tongues wagging
Our Poetry Book of the Month reviews include an extraordinary posthumous collection from Gboyega Odubanjo and JH Prynne’s unlikely lullabies
Christopher Childers has spent 10 years on The Penguin Book of Greek and Latin Lyric Verse – and his translations sing from the page
From Raymond Chandler's slippery similes to a scene Austen hid, a new exhibition reveals great writers' early drafts and discarded ideas
As the Irish singer champions The Forgotten Yeats Sisters for Sky Arts, she talks about women in history and the thrill of rock'n'roll