Bookmarks
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Editor's picks
‘Can I bring my switch?’  
A family holiday throws up existential questions
A family holiday throws up existential questions
Authors on their favourite fictional escapes  
No holiday has attained this level of perfection
No holiday has attained this level of perfection
Thomas Morris  
I’ve just done a story from the view of a seagull
I’ve just done a story from the view of a seagull
‘Our book is Barbie meets Oppenheimer'  
Why we wrote about nostalgia in an era of crisis
Why we wrote about nostalgia in an era of crisis
The Heartstopper reading list  
What has Isaac been reading in season two?
What has Isaac been reading in season two?
The last word  
‘Pandora! I adore ya!’: the best descriptions of first love in literature
‘Pandora! I adore ya!’: the best descriptions of first love in literature
Books of the week
Every Rising Sun by Jamila Ahmed review – a feminist take on One Thousand and One Nights
Every Rising Sun by Jamila Ahmed review – a feminist take on One Thousand and One Nights
Shaherazade is a rebel with an ever-evolving cause in this novelisation of the classic tales
Party Lines by Ed Gillett review – the politics of dancing
A buzzing study of how the cat-and-mouse game played by partygoers and the state shaped contemporary Britain
The Future Future by Adam Thirlwell review – the historical novel, subverted
This slippery, anachronistic and strangely beautiful tale of patriarchy and power moves from revolutionary Paris to a lunar commune
High Caucasus by Tom Parfitt review – beauty and trauma in the Russian south
An epic trek through the mountains brings healing and understanding to a veteran journalist
Witness by Jamel Brinkley – a master of intimate interactions
Built around the ‘folds and creases’ of contemporary life, the American writer’s second collection is a tour de force of the short form
Spotlight
Lucy Worsley, Erin Kelly and more
This month's best paperbacks  
Lucy Worsley, Erin Kelly and more
Looking for a new reading recommendation? Here are some fantastic new paperbacks, from a biography of a beloved writer to a brilliant graphic novel
Talking points and news
Irish writers, debuts – and groundbreaking sci-fi: the Booker longlist in depth
Irish writers, debuts – and groundbreaking sci-fi: the Booker longlist in depth
The personal meets the political in a list that includes dystopia and SF as well as little-known debuts
New Stephen Hawking children’s book to be published next year
You and the Universe, adapted from his posthumous 2020 Earth Day message, will bring the late physicist’s ‘extraordinary work to life for readers of all ages’
Short story collection by Pedro Almodóvar to be published next year
An English translation of 12 stories, which the Spanish film director calls his ‘fragmentary autobiography’, will come out next September
Authors join online campaign to save ‘vital’ Devon mobile library services
Stephen Fry and Michael Rosen say that councillors’ choice to discontinue the vans would restrict people’s access to books and amounts to an ‘act of cruelty’

A recent scientific paper showed that climate breakdown is drastically increasing the chances of simultaneous crop losses in the world's poorest nations. The effects of this could be devastating.

We face an epochal, unthinkable prospect: of perhaps the two greatest existential threats – environmental breakdown and food system failure – converging, as one triggers the other.

So why isn’t this all over the front pages? Why, when governments know we’re facing existential risk, do they fail to act?

Looking back on previous human calamities, all of which will be dwarfed by this, you find yourself repeatedly asking “why didn’t they … ?” The answer is power: the power of a few to countermand the interests of humanity. It always has been, but the stakes are now higher than ever.

At the Guardian, we make a point of maintaining focus on the climate crisis. We have a large, global team of writers whose sole focus is this subject, and have recently appointed an extreme weather reporter and a European environment correspondent as well. We can only do this thanks to support from readers.

If you can, support journalism which puts the planet first.

George Monbiot,
Guardian columnist

From the archive
Tears, tiffs and triumphs: 40 years of Booker prize judges dish the dirt
Tears, tiffs and triumphs: 40 years of Booker prize judges dish the dirt
One judge threatened to throw himself off a balcony, another provoked a punch-up, a third was chatted up by Saul Bellow ... To mark the 40th anniversary of the Booker prize, we asked a judge from every year to tell us the inside story of how the winner was chosen
Writing your first novel: A six-week creative writing programme with Ross Raisin
13 September-18 October, 6.30pm-9pm BST
Over six weeks, the award-winning novelist Ross Raisin will give you the skills, confidence and creative inspiration you need to craft your first novel.
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