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FT Books Essay

  • Saturday, 31 May, 2025
    The best books of the week
    Finding their religion: why Gen Z are turning to faith

    As spiritual belief shows signs of a quiet revival in Britain, has Christianity regained the underground appeal of its earliest days?

    A smartphone mounted on a stand, and with rosary beads hanging at its side, shows a video by a Catholic priest delivering a sermon and wearing traditional robes
  • Tuesday, 20 May, 2025
    ReviewPolitical books
    The great Biden cover-up and how the Democrats lost 2024

    Three books tell the painful story of an ageing American president and how his catastrophic decision to run again paved the way for a Trump comeback

  • Saturday, 10 May, 2025
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    The consequences of plundering resources from the ground

    Our hunger for the Earth’s natural riches drives both political power and immense destruction. Two new books call for a reappraisal of the wealth beneath our feet

  • Saturday, 3 May, 2025
    Non-Fiction
    China, Russia and the remaking of the Eurasian supercontinent

    Three books offer a guide to shifting power in the region and what it means for the US and Europe

  • Saturday, 26 April, 2025
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    Why our planet (and not just its people) should have legal rights

    New books by Robert Macfarlane and Tony Juniper strengthen the case for granting the natural environment protection in law on par with personhood

    A photograph of an old, gnarled tree, its branches wilted and its trunk covered with ivy, against a backdrop of blue sky, mist and autumn countryside
  • Saturday, 19 April, 2025
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    What does music gain from or lose to technology?

    Amid the seemingly existential challenge by AI to the artistic process, two books explore how human creativity responds to changing environments

    Four men stand at lecterns on a stage. Behind them, large images of the four men, dressed identically in suit trousers, shirts and ties, are shown on a bright red screen
  • Saturday, 12 April, 2025
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    How Nvidia became the driving force behind the AI revolution

    Two books chart the rise of the chipmaker via its ‘benevolent dictator’ Jensen Huang and an early gamble on deep learning

    A man stands on a stage giving a talk in front of a giant screen image of a blue planet earth surrounded by the darkness of space
  • Saturday, 5 April, 2025
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    Women, work and why we’re getting it all wrong

    Cordelia Fine, Charlie Colenutt and Emily Callaci dive into the often unfair and random ways we value labour

  • Saturday, 22 February, 2025
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    Big Tech and the genesis of AI’s new world order

    Should Silicon Valley serve the military? What will tech wars mean? And will AI’s inhuman speed outpace regulators? Three books peer into a fast-evolving future

    A bank of five stacks of computer hardware attached to thick cables and glowing in the dark
  • Friday, 14 February, 2025
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    Israel, Gaza and the uneasy debate about the war and its victims

    The October 7 atrocity, mass Palestinian deaths . . . three new books tackle questions of blame, victimhood and the region’s future

    Seen through clouds of churned-up dust, a tank speeds away through a breach in a wire fence
  • Saturday, 1 February, 2025
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    How technology is reshaping human experience

    Three new books take up the cause of defending the mind against the digital world’s age of attention

  • Saturday, 25 January, 2025
    ReviewBiography and memoir
    Living the New York dream?

    The city of constant reinvention that has drawn women in search of a new life is captured in a stunning new graphic novel — plus classic reissued memoirs and novels

  • Tuesday, 7 January, 2025
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    The contradictions of Xi Jinping

    Two incisive studies of the Chinese president reveal a complex figure who is all too aware of the capricious nature of power

  • Saturday, 30 November, 2024
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    Zero Sum by Charles Hecker — adventures in Russian capitalism

    This fascinating exploration of the role western business has played in the country’s development shows that lessons have not been learnt

    A young woman in a furry hat and a teenager in a red coat sit sipping McDonalds milkshakes. Behind them is a mural of a street scene with a McDonalds sign; in front of them, discarded burger packaging
  • Thursday, 7 November, 2024
    ReviewBooks
    Kaput by Wolfgang Münchau — Germany’s great decline

    An eloquent analysis of the country’s economic struggles argues that long-term political culture is to blame

    Three women watch work on an open pit mine in the distance
  • Sunday, 6 October, 2024
    ReviewBooks
    On Freedom — Timothy Snyder’s timely manifesto for our fearful age

    The historian draws on his experience in Ukraine and eastern Europe to warn of the dangers of tyranny in the US

    A white flag with one horizontal blue stripe hangs on the fence of a single-storey brick-built house in southern Russia. Well-kept flowers are in bloom in front of the fence and the flag
  • Saturday, 21 September, 2024
    Non-Fiction
    Did the 1990s break America’s faith in democracy?

    Three new books on the US look at the Clinton decade, the rise of conspiracies and the existential threat of November’s presidential election

    Fans of a political speaker gather at a convention to hear him talk
  • Saturday, 7 September, 2024
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    AI: too much information?

    Yuval Noah Harari and Parmy Olson on how the race for superintelligence may amplify the worst of human nature

    Two pictures of a white automaton with a humanoid face being held up
  • Saturday, 31 August, 2024
    ReviewHistory books
    The Revelation of Ireland: 1995-2020 — a tumultuous quarter-century

    Diarmaid Ferriter’s history of modern Ireland chronicles the dramatic social, political and economic shifts that have taken place within a generation

  • Saturday, 27 July, 2024
    ReviewBooks
    Can tyrants be curtailed?

    Two books examine how today’s autocrats differ from those of the past, and what liberal democracies can do to counter their influence

    Lines of suited officials and a crowd of children waving flags stand in front of a tall public building draped with Russian and North Korea flags and portraits of Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un
  • Saturday, 20 July, 2024
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    Paris, from Balzac to the banlieues

    With the French capital poised for the Olympics, two new books seek to expose the social challenges that have long existed at the margins of the city

  • Saturday, 6 July, 2024
    Political books
    Can Britain be mended?

    As the new government faces an economy, society and political system in despair, there is no shortage of prescriptions to put things right

    Group of men and a woman talking to each other in hi-viz jackets and hard hats
  • Sunday, 16 June, 2024
    ReviewBooks
    How should migration be managed?

    As the global movement of people prompts hardline approaches by populists and policymakers, four new books explore the west’s struggle to balance domestic pressures with the plight of asylum-seekers

    A man in a hat and with  a bag and blanket on his back watches a heavy-goods train passing
  • Saturday, 8 June, 2024
    ReviewBooks
    Beijing’s new world order

    Three new books on China help bring definition to the emerging economic contours of cold war 2.0

  • Saturday, 1 June, 2024
    Biography and memoir
    Why we still care about Kafka

    100 years after the writer’s death, what do his uncensored diaries, and a raft of new studies, reveal about what made him and his relevance in our digital age?

    Blue-toned Pop Art image of the face of writer Franz Kafka
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