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05 Sept 2025

5 new books to read this week

5 new books to read this week

Ian McEwan and Michael Rosen return with a couple of absolute hits…

Fiction

What We Can Know by Ian McEwan is published in hardback by Jonathan Cape, priced £22 (ebook £9.99). Available September 18


In 2119, Professor Thomas Metcalfe is obsessed with a poem read aloud in 2014, and recorded seemingly nowhere, by literary great, Francis Blundy, which he’d written for his wife, former academic turned homemaker Vivien. What We Can Know is an astonishing consideration of how the tendrils of the past leak into the present, how it’s recorded and interpreted, and the dangers of believing what we want to believe, about ourselves and the decisions we’ve made. Most fascinating are the snippets of Ian McEwan’s imagined future Britain, largely submerged and transformed into an archipelago, where the youth are dumbfounded by the greed of the Nineties to 2030s and the planet is reeling from nuclear war and climate change. It’s terrifyingly believable, even if Thomas Metcalfe is a rather flat and uncharismatic character to view our mistakes through. Vivien is more bewitching. McEwan cleverly structures the book to reveal her inner workings, while the thoughts he raises around loss – because of Alzheimer’s, infidelity, heedlessness, death and the sheer passing of time – rumble spectacularly throughout.
9/10
Review by Ella Walker

No Friend to This House by Natalie Haynes is published in hardback by Mantle, priced £20 (ebook £9.99). Available September 11

If there is one thing Natalie Haynes (author of Stone Blind, A Thousand Ships and Pandora’s Jar) knows how to do, it is reposition the classics. And her latest offering, No Friend to This House, raises the bar even more. Described as an “extraordinary reimagining of the myth of Medea”, it takes readers on a journey with new details that feels like they haven’t been explored before. Based on Euripides’ classic tragedy, readers are given a seat alongside Jason and his Argonauts as they set sail in search of the Golden Fleece. From characters on the periphery, whose roles in the larger stories are often overlooked, to the main players, there is no shortage of detail to keep you riveted. In the world of Greek tragedy, Medea is often considered one of the most complex and divisive characters. But Haynes’ No Friend To This House gives readers more to consider about her.
8/10
Review by Kerri-Ann Roper

Will There Ever Be Another You by Patricia Lockwood is published in hardback by Bloomsbury Circus, priced £16.99 (ebook £7.97). Available September 23


Disorientating, chaotic, oddly moving, deeply sad at times and slightly all over the shop, Will There Ever Be Another You is like being inside a literary washing machine. The words are beautiful, the sentences often stunning, but the structure has spiralled so out of control that the numerous tangents are impossibly tricksy to keep track of. This is, however, part of the point. American poet Patricia Lockwood wrote her latest novel while sick with Covid, and so it reads feverishly, but eloquently, tracing the outlines of a woman’s family trip to Scotland, her husband’s surgery and her own shifting grasp on what’s actually real and important as she attempts recovery during the pandemic. It’s certainly intriguing and races along as you attempt piecing the fragmented story together, but don’t expect a satisfying conclusion. You have to try and enjoy the riddle of it.
7/10
Review by Ella Walker

The Traitors Circle by Jonathan Freedland is published in hardback by John Murray, priced £25 (ebook £9.99). Available September 11

Berlin, September 1943. As the course of World War Two begins to turn decisively against Germany, a group of friends meet for a birthday celebration. Among them are army officers, government officials and two countesses – members of the capital’s high society who have long believed that national socialism must be overthrown for the sake of Germany, and hope to bring it about. But among the party is an interloper who will betray these traitors to the Reich. Jonathan Freedland takes this fascinating tale and uses it to paint a portrait of life in the crumbling regime – the fear, the intrigue, the daily suffering – and pay tribute to those who dared to stand up against evil. With a sure but light touch, this reads like a novel, with Freedland’s focus on the very human emotions at the heart of this tragic but important story.
8/10
Review by Ian Parker

Children’s book of the week

Oh Dear, Look What I Got! by Michael Rosen, illustrated by Helen Oxenbury, is published in hardback by Walker Books, priced £12.99 (ebook £6.49). Available September 11


More than 35 years since much-loved bestselling classic We’re Going on a Bear Hunt was first released, Michael Rosen and Helen Oxenbury have reunited for the first time to bring you Oh Dear, Look What I Got! Have you ever been on a shopping trip where things didn’t quite go to plan? Well, that’s what’s happening here, with Rosen throwing humour, animals and lots of fun into the mix. This read-aloud story uses rhyming words, brilliant illustrations from Oxenbury and includes a response for children to join in with, making it enjoyable for the whole family as you’re guessing what’s going to happen next. If Bear Hunt was one of your favourites to read as a child yourself, or to your kids, then you’re probably going to love this too.
9/10
Review by Karen Shield

BOOK CHARTS FOR THE WEEK ENDING

HARDBACK (FICTION)
1. Katabasis by R.F. Kuang
2. Dire Bound: The Wolves of Ruin by Sable Sorensen
3. Picture Imperfect by Jacqueline Wilson
4. The Artist by Lucy Steeds, Lucy
5. Boudicca’s Daughter by Elodie Harper
6. Quicksilver by Callie Hart
7. A Particularly Nasty Case by Adam Kay
8. On Wings Of Blood by Briar Boleyn
9. Our Beautiful Mess by Adele Parks
10. Wolf Hour by Jo Nesbo
(Compiled by Waterstones)

HARDBACK (NON-FICTION)
1. The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins and Sawyer Robbins
2. Domination by Alice Roberts
3. Speedy Comfort by Jon Watts
4. Guinness World Records 2026
5. Entitled:The Rise and Fall of the House of York by Andrew Lownie
6. Jess and Norma by Jessica Asquith and Norma Burton
7. Frankly by Nicola Sturgeon
8. Don’t Believe Everything You Think by Joseph Nguyen
9. The Almanac: A Seasonal Guide to 2026 by Lia Leendertz
10. Ocean:Earth’s Last Wilderness by Sir David Attenborough and Colin Butfield
(Compiled by Waterstones)

AUDIOBOOKS (FICTION AND NONFICTION)
1. The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins
2. The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman
3. Don’t Let Him In by Lisa Jewell
4. Entitled by Andrew Lownie
5. The Night She Disappeared by Lisa Jewell
6. The Wedding People by Alison Espach
7. Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, Book 1 by J.K. Rowling
8. The Names by Florence Knapp
9. The Man Who Died Twice by Richard Osman
10. Friends of Dorothy by Sandi Toksvig
(Compiled by Audible)

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