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Editors' picks
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When Hugo Young died he left behind detailed notes of 30 years of conversations with the stars of the political scene. They are now to be published. Here we present an exclusive extract, covering the early years of New Labour
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Off the record
Following the publication of The Hugo Young Papers, Alan Rusbridger reflects on the legacies of the legendary columnist
Features & reviews p2
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Writers' rooms: Gillian Slovo
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The week in books
A gag per page; anti-tourism; evening classes in novel-writing; and glad to be Gladwell
Features & reviews p5
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The seven ages of Shakespeare
Review: Soul of the Age: The Life, Mind and World of William Shakespeare by Jonathan Bate
Can another biography really surprise us? Absolutely, says Richard Eyre -
Guardian book club: Languages
Features & reviews p6
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Apache
Review: Apache, by Ed Macy, read by Sam Hazeldine
Apache reminds Sue Arnold that soldiers truly are a breed apart -
Pilgrim State
Review: Pilgrim State, written and read by Jacqueline Walker with Adjoa Andoh, Gareth Armstrong and others
Sue Arnold finds a survival story to warm the chilliest heart -
The real Mrs Tiggy-Winkle
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The mischievous oracle
Features & reviews p7
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Noises off
Features & reviews p8
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God's prompter
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How the war was won
Features & reviews p9
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My poisoned bon-bons
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Strangers on a train
Features & reviews p10
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Children's Fiction
The Boy in the Dress by David Walliams
Philip Ardagh on the literary debut of a Little Britain star -
Out of Amazonia
Review: Ashes of the Amazon by Milton Hatoum
Manaus forms an exotic backdrop to a bitter tale, finds Maya Jaggi -
Good company
Review: Hide Now by Glyn Maxwell
Adam Newey searches for meaning in a subtle collection
Features & reviews p11
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Thomas Keneally: Schindler's archivist
Features & reviews p12
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Ten of the best episodes of drunkenness
From Lucky Jim to Emma
Features & reviews p13
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The Exclamation Mark
Review: The Exclamation Mark by Anton Chekov
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Nicholas Lezard's choice
Review: Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio
Nicholas Lezard finds some timely tales from the wheel of fortune -
Milton: Poet, Pamphleteer and Patriot
Review: Milton: Poet, Pamphleteer and Patriot by Anna Beer
This biography shows how remarkable it was for an old blind man to produce Paradise Lost -
Guardian First Book award
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The Triumph of the Political Class
Review: The Triumph of the Political Class by Peter Oborne
This is a serious, fearless tirade against politicians and New Labour -
The Letters of Noël Coward
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The Man in the Picture
Review: The Man in the Picture by Susan Hill
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Jumping the Cracks
Features & reviews p14
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Letters
Hitler's classmate | The Middletown mystery | On the wing | A sort of science fiction | In praise of Jonathan Ross | Slave-owning Jefferson | Bring back squalor
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Death, mercy and keeping up with the Beats
Simon Gray's mortality, Toni Morrison's language and the Beats' beginnings
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Author, author: On the right track
Hilary Mantel on getting the facts right in historical fiction
Features & reviews p15
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Shafts of sunlight
Features & reviews p16
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The well-read terror
As a new film about the infamous Red Army Faction relights old fires, Philip Oltermann charts the cultural impact of a revolutionary movement that has long fascinated writers, actors and film-makers
Features & reviews p18
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Within those walls
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Under the Jacarandas by Clive James
Features & reviews p19
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The Night Bookmobile
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52
A story in instalments by Jeanette Winterson, Ali Smith, AM Homes and Jackie Kay
Features & reviews p20
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Digested classics: The Painted Veil by Somerset Maugham
John Crace condenses The Painted Veil


















