Daily Mail

MUST READS

Out now in paperback

- JANE SHILLING

A THEATRE FOR DREAMERS by Polly Samson (Bloomsbury £8.99, 368 pp)

IN THE 1960s, the Greek island of Hydra became a haven for artists and writers. The most famous was the musician Leonard Cohen, who found a muse in Marianne Ihlen.

In 1960 the heroine of Polly Samson’s fifth novel, 18-year-old Erica, arrives on Hydra with her handsome boyfriend Jimmy, a would-be poet.

On her deathbed, Erica’s mother urged her to ‘have some adventures’, confirming her advice with a legacy of £1,000 and a book by Hydra resident Charmian Clift, who becomes a mentor to Erica.

But amid luscious descriptio­ns of Hydra’s sundrenche­d streets, Samson’s novel is sharply observant of the personal price paid by the island’s female muses, so ‘ beautifull­y trained in the arts that facilitate good writing’.

A DOUBLE LIFE by Charlotte Philby (The Borough Press £8.99, 480 pp)

ON THE surface, Gabriela and Tom look like a perfect modern couple.

While Gabriela pursues a successful career at the Foreign Office, Tom, a freelance architect, holds the fort at their home in North London, caring for their children. But Gabriela’s work is not all that it seems. On her first posting, to Moscow, she accidental­ly made a shocking discovery, whose consequenc­es will come back to haunt her.

Returning in the small hours from a party, Isobel, a journalist on Gabriela’s local newspaper, witnesses a disturbing incident on Hampstead Heath and becomes the target of terrifying anonymous threats.

Charlotte Philby is the granddaugh­ter of the double agent Kim Philby, and her pacy thriller is a persuasive account of the terrible cost of living a double life.

PUTIN’S PEOPLE by Catherine Belton (William Collins £9.99, 640 pp)

AS A young KGB officer in East Germany, Putin met exiled Russian princess Tatiana von Metternich. She was impressed with this pale-eyed man: despite his Communist background, he went to confession.

As Catherine Belton’s meticulous­ly researched book reveals, Putin had much to confess. At his inaugurati­on as Russian President in 2000, he spoke of his ‘holy duty to unite the people of Russia’.

But Belton, a former Financial Times Moscow correspond­ent, reveals that, since his early days in Germany, Putin had been engaged in funnelling abroad his nation’s wealth to exert ‘authoritar­ian control at home, and for underminin­g institutio­ns in the West’, from the House of Lords to the Trump White House. Belton’s book reads like a gripping political thriller, but it tells a chilling truth.

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