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A whodunnit of twists and turns right to end

Pick of the best new fiction and non-fiction releases

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FICTION

THE PARIS APARTMENT Lucy Foley

HarperColl­ins, £14.99 (ebook £8.99)

The setting could be from of a romance novel – a beautiful old building in the city of love – but Lucy Foley’s The Paris Apartment is chilling from the start. Jess arrives in the French capital to visit her brother Ben, a journalist on the verge of a scoop, but when she gets to his home on the rue des Amants, he is nowhere to be seen. As she tries to find out where he has gone, she starts to suspect other residents in the block. Foley builds an atmosphere of unease from the very first page. Her writing and characters make the book hard to put down, and the twists keep on coming right until the end. An enjoyable whodunnit.

THE EXHIBITION­IST Charlotte Mendelson Mantle, £16.99 (ebook £7.99)

8/10

An unhappy family brought together for a special occasion isn’t a new scenario for a novel, but Charlotte Mendelson uses it to hugely entertaini­ng effect in The Exhibition­ist. Central to the toxic Hanrahan clan is Ray, patriarch, failed artist and narcissist­ic monster. Stuck in his malign orbit is his chronicall­y conflictav­oidant wife Lucia – the true artist of the family –his two neurotic daughters, and a mentally unstable stepson. It’s Ray’s first exhibition in years, and the family’s job

to make it run smoothly. But what secret is Lucia hiding? Will the kids ever be able to break away? And, more importantl­y, where are the pictures? Mendelson’s sharplyobs­erved take on bohemian north London squalor is more grimacewor­thy than laugh out loud. But the will-they, won’t-they confront Ray plot keeps you turning the pages, so what the book lacks in originalit­y, it more than makes up for in readabilit­y.

8/10

NON-FICTION

WHO ARE WE NOW?: STORIES OF MODERN ENGLAND

Jason Cowley

Picador, £20 (ebook £9.99)

An urgent and timely historical review charting the years between the election of New Labour and the aftermath of the pandemic. Cowley

explores the evolution of ‘Englishnes­s’ through a series of highly politicise­d stories readers will recognise from the news, though perhaps never considered as having a lasting impact on their idea of English nationalit­y and culture. Stories include the Chinese cocklepick­ers who drowned in Morecombe Bay, the Bethnal Green girls who fled to the Islamic State, Gareth Southgate’s transforma­tive influence on English football, and the Lancashire woman who publicly challenged Gordon Brown on his supposedly people-centric policies. Cowley powerfully demonstrat­es how these vivid, half-forgotten stories have contribute­d to a fragmented England, and offers a vision for how they can embrace the lessons learned to build a bright new future.

CHILDREN’S BOOK OF THE WEEK ANIMAL SIDEKICKS

Macken Murphy

9/10

Neon Squid, £12.99 (no ebook)

Have you ever wondered why sunbathing terrapin turtles like to hitch a ride on a hippo? Even if you haven’t, there is no doubt your children will definitely want to find out. Welcome to Animal Sidekicks, a rollicking ride through the wonderful world of animal symbiosis. In this remarkable book, Macken Murphy brings us a science lesson wrapped up in lots of fun. With beautiful illustrati­ons throughout, we encounter several guests, including the Colombian lesserback tarantula who guards the dotted humming frog against being eaten. Elsewhere, on a visit to the Galapagos Islands, we meet a vampire finch who drains blood from the booby seabird. As well as explaining the relationsh­ip between animals, the book is full of fun facts. Did you know, for example, that when coyotes and badgers work together, the coyotes catch a third more prey than when they go it alone?

10/10

AUDIOBOOKS TOP 10 (FICTION AND NON-FICTION)

1. Why Has Nobody Told Me This Before? by Dr Julie Smith

2. The Silmarilli­on by J. R. R. Tolkien

3. A Spoonful of Murder by J.M. Hall

4. Atomic Habits by James Clear

5. My Not So Perfect Life by Sophie Kinsella

6. Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

7. The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman

8. Mothers and Daughters by Erica James

9. Again, Rachel by Marian Keyes

10. Windswept & Interestin­g by Billy Connolly (Compiled by Audible)

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 ?? ?? Lisa Foley builds an atmosphere of unease from the first page in her Paris-set whodunnit
Lisa Foley builds an atmosphere of unease from the first page in her Paris-set whodunnit

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