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Saturday, March 31, 2018

Fresh voices: 50 writers you should read now

Which debut novel should you reach for this spring? Who can map our digital future? Here’s our guide to the most exciting voices in fiction, politics, SF, graphic novels and more

Small presses are making a big noise at the moment because of books like ​Eley Williams’​ Attrib. and Other Stories

Artist and writer James Bridle is increasingly talked-about. His ambitious debut book New Dark Age comes out in July

Riad Sattouf spent a decade writing for Charlie Hebdo. His graphic novels mix darkness, dry humour and sharp observation

Tomi Adeyemi's ​debut ​Children of Blood and Bone has generated considerable excitement, with film rights already sold

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Friday, March 30, 2018

Agatha Christie reshoot with Ed Westwick stand-in is 'seamless'

Ordeal By Innocence airs on Easter Sunday with cast reshooting scenes in Scotland over 12 days

The actor Christian Cooke who saved the BBC flagship drama production Agatha Christie’s Ordeal By Innocence, which finally screens on BBC One on Easter Sunday after being pulled from the Christmas schedule, described the process of starring in the reshoot as “surprisingly seamless”.

A crucial 35 minutes had to be reshot over 12 days in Scotland in bitter January weather and stitched together with the original scenes that were filmed in summer sunshine. The sharp-eyed may spot that at one point while Cooke is manfully not shivering, his breath is steaming in the icy air.

Related: Shot and shot again: the Agatha Christie TV mystery that rose from the dead

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Tennessee Williams lacked confidence, letters to friends reveal

Book of previously-unpublished correspondence shows writer’s constant need for reassurance

He found fame with The Glass Menagerie and won Pulitzer prizes for his stage masterpieces, A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, but Tennessee Williams was plagued by self-doubt, previously unpublished letters reveal.

The American dramatist’s lack of confidence emerges repeatedly through his correspondence with trusted friends -his publisher James Laughlin, and editor Robert MacGregor - over 25 years until his death in 1983. In 1964, he wrote of his “self-contempt”, adding: “I must confess that I have doubts and fears.” In 1972, he confided: “You know how badly I need reassurance about my work.”

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Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Jay Bernard’s ‘personal and brave’ poetry wins Ted Hughes award

Surge: Side A, an intimate multimedia exploration of 1981 New Cross fire, wins £5,000 prize

Jay Bernard has won the Ted Hughes award for new poetry with the performance Surge: Side A, a multimedia sequence which explores the 1981 New Cross fire.

The £5,000 prize is given to the poet “who has made the most exciting contribution to poetry”, putting published collections alongside live performance, installations and radio pieces.

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Marlon Bundo: booksellers furious over decision to launch on Amazon

Independent booksellers in the US have said the online release of John Oliver’s surprise title is ‘a slap in the face’ for stores on the frontline of diversity

Independent booksellers in the US have described the decision to initially release comedian John Oliver’s parody title about vice president Mike Pence’s rabbit through Amazon as “a slap in the face”.

A Day in the Life of Marlon Bundo, a picture book written by Jill Twiss that recounts how Pence’s rabbit falls in love with a male bunny, was an immediate hit, reaching No 1 on Amazon. Publisher Chronicle Books has said it is now printing 400,000 copies, up from an initial figure of 40,000. Dedicated “to every bunny who has ever felt different”, Oliver’s title was released in response to – and just before – Pence’s daughter Charlotte and wife Karen’s Marlon Bundo’s A Day in the Life of the Vice President, which is currently No 48 on Amazon. Pence has said that gay marriage will lead to the “deterioration of the family” and “societal collapse”. Proceeds from Oliver’s book will go to Aids United and the LGBTQ charity the Trevor Project.

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Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Italian bookseller guilty of stealing rare copy of Harry Potter

Rudolf Schönegger, 55, switched signed edition worth £1,675 with another book at store in London

An Italian bookseller has been convicted of stealing a first edition Harry Potter book, signed by J K Rowling, by switching it with a different novel in a shop in central London.

Rudolf Schönegger, 55, swapped a signed version of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire worth £1,675 with a copy of Late Call, by Angus Wilson, at Hatchards in Piccadilly on New Year’s Eve.

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Samantha Harvey on The Western Wind, plus how to define science fiction – books podcast

On this week’s show, Sian Cain, Claire Armitstead and Richard Lea discuss what they are reading. With Claire fresh from a Brian Aldiss binge, this leads to a debate on how to define science fiction. Is snobbery a big factor in how the genre is defined?

Then Richard sits down with Samantha Harvey, to talk about her fourth novel, The Western Wind. An unconventional murder mystery, The Western Wind sees a 15th-century priest turns detective in his tiny, isolated Somerset village when a man is swept away by a river. Starting four days after the death and moving backwards in time, Harvey’s latest novel is a complex portrait of a secretive community.

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'Deeply weird and enjoyable': Ursula K Le Guin's electronica album

In the 1980s, the sci-fi author teamed up with musician Todd Barton, inventing new instruments and a language to create Music and Poetry of the Kesh. Is the album any good?

The late Ursula K Le Guin wrote many well-loved novels, but few people know that the legendary science fiction and fantasy author once made an album. The strange and enchanting record Music and Poetry of the Kesh – which Le Guin created with the electronic musician and composer Todd Barton to accompany her 1985 book Always Coming Home – has been reissued, following Le Guin’s death in January.

Related: Don't know where to start? The essential novels of Ursula K Le Guin

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Monday, March 26, 2018

Children's book praising Hitler as 'amazing leader' pulled by Indian publisher

Publisher Pegasus had claimed Hitler was included for his leadership skills, alongside Gandhi, Barack Obama and Nelson Mandela

An Indian publisher has withdrawn a book for children which included Adolf Hitler on a list of “amazing leaders … who have devoted their lives [to] the betterment of their country and people”.

Pegasus, the children’s books imprint of India’s B Jain Publishing Group, confirmed to the Guardian on 26 March that its title Leaders was no longer on sale, following widespread criticism of its decision to feature Hitler in the book, alongside the likes of Gandhi, Winston Churchill, Barack Obama and Nelson Mandela.

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A Wrinkle in Time: weird science, giant Oprah – discuss with spoilers

Disney’s family fantasy is based on a 1962 novel and centres on a mixed-race girl who is mad about science and travels alien worlds. Has it hit the right note?

  • This article contains spoilers

After the spectacular success of Black Panther, Disney’s expensive new family fantasy, A Wrinkle in Time, signals another milestone in Hollywood inclusion. It was directed by an African-American woman (Ava DuVernay), its cast is commendably diverse, and it centres on a mixed-race girl who likes science. This troubled kid (played by Storm Reid) is pitched into a journey through vibrantly hued alien worlds on a quest for her missing father (Chris Pine), accompanied by her little brother and a neighbourhood friend, and guided by three outlandishly costumed “witches”, played by Reese Witherspoon, Mindy Kaling and Oprah Winfrey.

Reception for the movie has been mixed: it currently has a 40% score on Rotten Tomatoes and a 53 on Metacritic. But the movie has found a legion of fans and admirers, and won praise for its charm, its positive vibes, and its diverse casting. For decades, Madeleine L’Engle’s source novel, published in 1962, was considered to be unfilmable. Is now the time? Did DuVernay iron out the wrinkles? What worked and what didn’t?

Related: A Wrinkle in Time review – wacky fantasy takes Oprah to infinity and beyond

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Sunday, March 25, 2018

Henry Moore rubbished Barbara Hepworth sculpture, diaries say

Revered artist said to have slated rival sculptor’s work when Tate board was considering buying it

He is revered as one of the masters of 20th-century British sculpture, but Henry Moore belittled rival artists while promoting himself within the Tate gallery, according to previously unpublished diaries.

In 1945, the Tate’s board was considering whether to purchase a wooden sculpture by Barbara Hepworth. Moore, then a gallery trustee, interjected with the damning words: “If sculpture [was] nothing more than that, it would be a poor affair.” The ploy worked. The Hepworth was rejected by the board, while every one of seven sculptures the Tate bought that year was by none other than Henry Moore. The incident is recorded in the diaries of John Rothenstein, who headed the Tate for 26 years from 1938.

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Saturday, March 24, 2018

Shot and shot again: the Agatha Christie TV mystery that rose from the dead

Ordeal by Innocence will finally air at Easter after rape allegations against an actor put the show in jeopardy. Producer and writer Sarah Phelps tells of her relief

The BBC TV adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Ordeal by Innocence was lined up as the biggest show of last Christmas. Then, in November, Ed Westwick, who had the key role of Mickey Argyll, was accused of rape and sexual assault – allegations he has denied. Ordeal by Innocence was pulled from the schedules.

Now Sarah Phelps’s three-part drama will air on BBC One from Easter Sunday with Christian Cooke in Westwick’s role. The reshoots, which constituted 45 minutes of material, took place over 12 days. Phelps admits her overwhelming feeling is relief. “The BBC made absolutely the right decision [to pull it] and I completely supported that decision because it’s about being moral and right and having integrity, but then there’s that thing of: oh God, is it going to see the light of day?” she says.

Related: Ed Westwick replaced in BBC drama after sexual assault allegations

If you want a 'pure' adaptation, go and get someone else to do it

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Unpublished art by Lord of the Rings creator JRR Tolkien goes on show

Rare and diverse paintings and drawings reveal visual talents of celebrated Oxford author


Three previously unpublished artworks by JRR Tolkien are to be displayed for the first time as part of a major exhibition coming to the University of Oxford’s Bodleian Libraries this summer.

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Friday, March 23, 2018

Firefighter dies after set of new Edward Norton film catches fire in Harlem

  • Michael R Davidson, 37, killed at Harlem apartment building
  • Jonathan Lethem adaptation also stars Willis, Defoe and Baldwin

A New York firefighter was killed on Thursday night in a blaze at an unoccupied residential building in Harlem that was being used as a set for a new film directed by Edward Norton.

The fire broke out on the set of Motherless Brooklyn at about 11pm. Flames poured out of windows as firefighters swarmed the scene.

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Thursday, March 22, 2018

Black Lives Matter novel wins Waterstones children's book of the year

The Hate U Give, by US author Angie Thomas, has been praised as an extraordinary achievement

A young adult novel inspired by both the Black Lives Matter movement and the rapper Tupac Shakur has won the Waterstones children’s book prize.

Angie Thomas’s debut The Hate U Give won the £5,000 prize, an accolade decided entirely by booksellers, at a ceremony in London on 22 March. Following Starr, a teenage girl split between the poverty of her childhood and the affluent high school she attends, The Hate U Give explores racism and the aftermath of police violence when Starr witnesses the fatal shooting of an unarmed friend at the hands of an officer.

Related: Angie Thomas: the debut novelist who turned racism and police violence into a bestseller

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Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Spanish publisher subverts court gag by using Don Quixote to recreate banned book

Finding Fariña website allows Spanish readers to read book about drug trafficking in Galicia while author Nacho Carretero and publisher face off legal action

Don Quixote famously tilted at windmills; now the Booksellers Guild of Madrid is using Cervantes’s 400-year-old novel to take a tilt at the Spanish court system, highlighting 80,000 words in Don Quixote to make the text of a recently banned book about drug smuggling available to readers online.

Nacho Carretero’s Fariña, an expose of drug trafficking in Galicia, was published in 2015, but publication and sales were halted last month after the former mayor of O Grove in Galicia, Jose Alfredo Bea Gondar brought legal action against Carretero and his publisher Libros del KO. Bea Gondar is suing over details in the book about his alleged involvement in drug shipping.

Related: William Shakespeare or Miguel de Cervantes: who said what? – quiz

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Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Bring your brolly if you come to Ayrshire | Brief letters

Porthaethwy Waitrose | Pricing of goods | Arthur C Clarke’s 2001 | Goatfell visibility | Theresa May’s hat

Here in Wales, Porthaethwy on Ynys Mon (that’s Menai Bridge on Anglesey, to those few Guardian readers who don’t speak Welsh) is a much smaller community than Gillingham, Dorset: population 3,376 in the 2011 census, compared with Gillingham’s 11,756 in the same year (Letters, 16 March). In September 2010, Ynys Mon’s population was temporarily swelled by two, when a certain Flight Lieutenant Wales, accompanied by one Kate Middleton, was posted to RAF Valley. By a strange coincidence, Waitrose opened its only north Wales branch in the little community of Porthaethwy at almost exactly the same time. Clearly, size doesn’t matter to Waitrose. It’s having posh neighbours that makes all the difference.
Fiona Collins
Corwen, Denbighshire

• Re the pricing of goods at £x.99 (Pass notes, 15 March), I have always understood that this was not to delude customers into thinking they were getting a bargain but to prevent dishonest cashiers from pocketing the proffered note. People would always wait for the sale to be rung through and the change given even if it was only a penny.
Lindy Hardcastle
Groby, Leicestershire

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Booksellers remove racist and Holocaust denial titles from their websites

Anti-racist group Hope Not Hate says Waterstones, Foyles, WH Smith and Amazon are lending respectability to offensive books, but retailers say listings come from uncurated feed

Major booksellers have been accused of lending a veneer of respectability to antisemitic and neo-Nazi books by featuring them for sale on their websites.

The UK’s largest anti-racist group Hope Not Hate published an investigation into the number of far-right and antisemitic works available to buy on the websites of Waterstones, Foyles, WH Smith and Amazon. These included a manual containing bomb-making instructions, extreme antisemitic tracts venerated by Hitler and numerous works by Holocaust deniers. Many listings have since been removed from the retailers’ websites.

No one is saying we should ban these books, but why do these stores want to give them the veneer of respectability?

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Richard Dawkins to give away copies of The God Delusion in Islamic countries

Author and the Centre for Inquiry planning free ebook versions of his books in Arabic, Urdu, Farsi and Indonesian following a ‘stirring towards atheism’ in some Islamic countries

Richard Dawkins is responding to what he called the “stirring towards atheism” in some Islamic countries with a programme to make free downloads of his books available in Arabic, Urdu, Farsi and Indonesian.

The scientist and atheist said he was “greatly encouraged” to learn that the unofficial Arabic pdf of the book had been downloaded 13m times. Dawkins writes in The God Delusion about his wish that the “open-minded people” who read it will “break free of the vice of religion altogether”. It has sold 3.3m copies worldwide since it was published in 2006 – far fewer than the number of Arabic copies that Dawkins believes to have been downloaded illegally.

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Mario Vargas Llosa: murder of Mexican journalists is due to press freedom

  • Nobel prize-winning novelist causes outrage with comments
  • More than 100 journalists killed in Mexico in past decade

Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa has provoked outrage in Mexico by saying that the murder of more than 100 journalists in Mexico over the past decade was due to an expansion of press freedom.

“There is more press freedom in Mexico today than 20 years ago, without doubt,” he said in an interview on Monday.

Related: 'Why must I live in fear?' Mexico shaken after yet another journalist murdered

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Monday, March 19, 2018

Female-dominated Wellcome book prize shortlist spans Victorian surgery and modern Nigeria

Titles vying for £30,000 award for books on health and medicine include Ayọ̀bámi Adébáyọ̀’s novel Stay With Me and Sigrid Rausing’s memoir Mayhem

A reflection on death from a palliative care consultant sits alongside a Nigerian novel tackling the heartbreak of infertility on the female-dominated Wellcome book prize shortlist.

Chair of judges Edmund de Waal praised the six contenders for the £30,000 award for adding to public discussion about what it means to be human. The panel of judges, he said, were looking for “books that start debates or deepen them, that move us profoundly, surprise and delight and perplex us, that bring the worlds of medicine and health into urgent public conversation”.

Related: Ayòbámi Adébáyò: ‘We should decide for ourselves what happiness looks like’

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Computers that give people a bad name | Brief letters

Hertfordshire art sell-off | HAL and Arthur Clarke | Ballot stuffing | Because

At Hertfordshire county council we have taken the decision to sell some art that has no clear link to our county (Parks, halls and art sold off to pay for essential services, 14 March). We are certainly not selling off the family silver for some short-term cash to prop up frontline services. Instead we are sensibly generating some additional funding to preserve Hertfordshire and nationally significant pieces of art for future generations of Hertfordshire residents.
Terry Douris
Cabinet member for libraries and archives, Hertfordshire county council

• Dr John Docherty (Letters, 17 March) repeats an old urban myth which I thought had been dismissed years ago. Arthur Clarke’s HAL had nothing to do with IBM. The relationship between the names is entirely coincidental. Clarke was so irritated by having to continually deny the story that he even made HAL’s inventor, Dr Chandra, describe the myth as “utter nonsense” in “2010”. Clarke also demolished the myth in his memoir The Lost Worlds of 2001.
David Collins
Harpenden, Hertfordshire

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'We're a nation in need of an assassin': Sean Penn's debut novel set to take on Trump

Bob Honey Who Just Do Stuff, out next month, features references to #MeToo, a ‘yellow lives matter’ march and a president called Mr Landlord

Actor Sean Penn’s debut novel, Bob Honey Who Just Do Stuff – an expanded version of a 2016 audiobook he wrote under the pen name of “sociopath” Pappy Pariah and narrated – will be published in April, featuring references to Donald Trump and the #MeToo movement.

The book details the story of Bob Honey, a “man of many trades – sewage specialist, purveyor of pyrotechnics, contract killer for a mysterious government agency that pays in small bills”. Pursued by an investigative journalist, Honey decides to take action wrest back control of his life from the branch of US intelligence that covertly employs him.

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Romance so white? Publishers grapple with race issues amid author protests

New report exposes decline in diversity in romance writing, as editor resigns after telling author they avoid putting non-white characters on covers ‘because we like the book to sell’

Readers, writers and editors of romance books are grappling with the genre’s record on diversity, after a week where a report found that books by authors of colour were on the decline, an imprint specialising in diverse romances closed, and another publisher was forced to apologise for telling a writer they avoided putting people of colour on book covers because they didn’t sell.

Queer romance writer Cole McCade came forward last week to reveal conversations with editor Sarah Lyons of the New Jersey-based publisher Riptide. McCade, who also writes as Xen Sanders, described Riptide as “at all levels hostile to me as a person of colour”. He published an email from Lyons in which she told him: “We don’t mind POC But I will warn you – and you have NO idea how much I hate having to say this – we won’t put them on the cover, because we like the book to, you know, sell :-(.”

Related: 'Women are having different fantasies': romantic fiction in the age of Trump

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Sunday, March 18, 2018

Barrister blows whistle on 'broken legal system brought to its knees by cuts'

Damning book by ‘secret barrister’ tells of courts so plagued by daily errors as to be unfit for purpose

Courts that are like an A&E unit on a Saturday night, violent abusers walking free because evidence has gone missing, and lawyers doing hours of unpaid work to keep the system from collapse, are all part of a damning picture painted in a new book on the legal system by a barrister.

According to the anonymous author of The Secret Barrister: Stories Of The Law And How It’s Broken, the courts in Britain have been brought to their knees by government cuts and left so plagued by daily errors they are no longer fit for purpose.

Related: UK courts service spending sees tenfold rise since 2010

Related: Court closures: sale of 126 premises raised just £34m, figures show

Related: Law Society takes action over cuts to legal aid fees

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Friday, March 16, 2018

Will the real Wackford Squeers step forward?

There is a new candidate for the man who inspired Charles Dickens’ sadistic and abusive headmaster in Nicholas Nickleby

It is not a claim to fame anyone would relish: the honour of being named as the inspiration for one of Charles Dickens’ most unappealing fictional characters, Wackford Squeers, sadistic headmaster of Dotheboys Hall in Nicholas Nickleby.

Even now, 180 years since the book came out, the identity of the real school teacher behind the cruel persecutor of Dicken’s young hero is disputed. Scholars remain unsure which of a clutch of venal proprietors of barbaric Victorian boarding schools was the true original.

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Thursday, March 15, 2018

Reni Eddo-Lodge wins Jhalak prize for British writers of colour

Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race praised for ‘holding up a mirror to contemporary Britain’

Reni Eddo-Lodge has won the Jhalak Prize for Book of the Year by a Writer of Colour. Her book, Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race, was praised by judges as a “clarion call for action”, which “not only holds up a mirror to contemporary Britain but also serves as a warning”.

Eddo-Lodge’s collection of essays began as a blogpost of the same title in 2014. Opening with her statement: “I’m no longer engaging with white people on the topic of race,” Eddo-Lodge wrote she could “no longer engage with the gulf of an emotional disconnect that white people display when a person of colour articulates our experiences. You can see their eyes shut down and harden. It’s like treacle is poured into their ears, blocking up their ear canals like they can no longer hear us.”

The book unflinchingly confronts a country where racism is at an all-time high, but there are no identifiable racists

Related: Why I’m no longer talking to white people about race

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Harper Lee estate sues over Broadway version of To Kill a Mockingbird

Estate alleges Aaron Sorkin’s script breaches undertakings to stay faithful to Lee’s novel, altering characters including Atticus Finch, Tom Robinson and Scout Finch

The estate of Harper Lee has filed a lawsuit against the producers of a highly-anticipated Broadway adaptation of To Kill A Mockingbird, arguing that the Aaron Sorkin’s script “departs from the spirit of the novel”.

The lawsuit, filed on Tuesday in Alabama by the late author’s lawyer Tonja Carter, alleges that Sorkin’s script has substantially altered Lee’s novel, despite a clause in the contract stipulating that “the play shall not derogate or depart in any manner from the spirit of the novel nor alter its characters”. The estate argues that Sorkin’s script alters several characters, including Atticus Finch – a lawyer who defends Tom Robinson, a black man unjustly accused of rape.

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Wednesday, March 14, 2018

A life in science: Stephen Hawking

The physicist and author, who has died at home in Cambridge, made intuitive leaps that will keep scientists busy for decades

Stephen Hawking always had something to say. He shook up the world of cosmology with more than 150 papers, dozens of which became renowned. He was told he had only a brief time on Earth, but spent half a century captivating audiences in lecture halls, on TV and in the pages of his books. For newspaper editors, almost any utterance of his could make a headline, and he knew it. Hawking warned about the threats of nuclear war, genetically modified viruses, artificial intelligence and marauding aliens. He pronounced on the human condition and once dismissed the role of God in creating the universe. The statement caused a fuss, as the denial of invisible superbeings still can in the 21st century.

Related: What has Stephen Hawking done for science?

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Dreams Must Explain Themselves by Ursula K Le Guin review – writing and the feminist fellowship

The SF and fantasy novelist worked on a selection of her non-fiction during her last year. Its subjects include motherhood, abortion and the menopause

In 1973 Ursula Le Guin was phoned by publisher and science fiction fan Andrew I Porter, trying to persuade her to write about herself in his magazine Algol. “Andy kept saying things like, ‘Tell the readers about yourself,’ and I kept saying things like, ‘How? Why?’” Standing in her hallway, with a child and a cat circling her legs, it seemed impossible to explain over the crackling connection that “the Jungian spectrum of introvert/extrovert can be applied not only to human beings but also to authors”. Le Guin knew that at one end of the spectrum there are authors such as Norman Mailer, who talk about themselves, and at the other, authors who, like her, need privacy.

When Le Guin died earlier this year, aged 88, the grief and gratitude her readers expressed were overwhelming. Through her Earthsea series, Hainish cycle and many other books she had enriched countless lives, broadened innumerable minds. In her last year, she worked on a selection of her non-fiction – essays, talks, introductions, reviews and meditations – for a British audience. Brief speeches given at the National Book awards ceremony, in 1972 and in 2014, open and close Dreams Must Explain Themselves, framing pieces spanning four decades drawn from previously published collections.

To keep women’s words alive and powerful – that’s our job as writers and readers for the next 15 years, and the next 50

Related: Ursula K Le Guin obituary

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Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald - first full trailer released

The first footage for the follow up to Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them has been launched online

The first full-length trailer for the sequel to Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them has been released. Subtitled The Crimes of Grindelwald, it sees Eddie Redmayne return in the role of “magizoologist” Newt Scamander in the second of the projected five films in the JK Rowling-scripted Harry Potter spinoff series.

Get your #WandsReady. #FantasticBeasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald arrives in theaters November 16. pic.twitter.com/JNdS92eWGo

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Tracy Beaker, please never grow up | Claire Armitstead

Jacqueline Wilson’s bolshie girl is now a single mum on a council estate. Raymond Briggs’s wordless Snowman is becoming a book for ‘a new and older audience’. Why can’t we leave kids books for kids?

Stop the world, I want to get off. On 10 March, it was announced that Tracy Beaker has grown up and become a single mum, in a sequel to Jacqueline Wilson’s beloved trilogy aimed at adults and teenagers as well as preteens. And now it’s been announced that Raymond Briggs’s Snowman is flying towards a similar fate with a retelling by the (admittedly admirable) Michael Morpurgo that will transport the heart-melting carrot-nosed snowman to a “chapter book” for “a new and older audience”.

A chapter book! I ask you! The whole point of The Snowman is that there are no words. He exists in the magical storytelling space that enfolds parents and the smallest children, who are just beginning to find a vocabulary to harness their chaotic, ardent emotions to the communal world of storytelling. When the Snowman tucks Arthur under his arm (obviously it’s Arthur, that’s my son’s name) and carries him high above the rooftops, it is to show him the world so he can describe it for himself. All these years on, my eyes well up thinking about it.

Wilson’s stories of brave children surviving against the odds brought debate to our dinner table and tears before bed

Things I like

My lucky number is seven. So why didn’t I get fostered by a fantastic rich family when I was seven then?

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Monday, March 12, 2018

Man Booker International prize longlist: Han Kang up for top gong again

Previous winners Han and László Krasznahorkai nominated for £50,000 award for translated fiction, on a longlist that spans Iraq to Taiwan


Former winners of the Man Booker International prize Han Kang and László Krasznahorkai will go head to head on this year’s longlist, competing with the cream of authors from around the world for the £50,000 award.

Korean novelist Han, who won the 2016 prize for her novel The Vegetarian, is longlisted this year for The White Book, a meditation on grief centred on the death of her baby sister two hours after birth. Hungarian Krasznahorkai, who is frequently tipped as a contender for the Nobel prize for literature and who won the Man Booker International in 2015, is in the running with The World Goes On, a series of stories told by an enigmatic narrator.

Related: Han Kang and Deborah Smith: ‘It is fascinating to ponder the possibili­ties of language’

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Sunday, March 11, 2018

Peter Temple, acclaimed crime writer, dies aged 71

The Miles Franklin award-winner transformed the face of Australian crime fiction, critic Peter Pierce says

Writers and fans have paid tribute to the Miles Franklin award-winning author Peter Temple, who has died aged 71.

Temple died on Thursday at his Ballarat home after a six-month battle with cancer. He is survived by his wife, Anita and son, Nicholas.

Related: The best Australian beach reads: 10 sharply written page-turners

My sincerest condolences to Peter Temple's family and friends. It's truly an honour to play one of your most beloved creations. Thank you for all the colourful characters you've introduced me to and the dark paths you've led me down. Respect and Peace PT.....xxx

Related: Could Miles Franklin turn the Booker prize to crime?

''He was to terse blokes with hard jobs and wounded souls what Proust was to memory. He made every sentence count and shot the stragglers.’’ Great epitaph for Jack Irish' author, South African-Australian journalist-academic-turned-crime writer Peter Temple https://t.co/VTlgxkfyZX

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Saturday, March 10, 2018

Tracy Beaker is back … as a single mum fighting to make ends meet

Jacqueline Wilson shot to fame 27 years ago with the story of a girl in a care home. She talks about her new book on the now grown-up heroine

It has been 27 years since Jacqueline Wilson, then a little-known children’s author, got together with Nick Sharratt, a young illustrator, and conceived one of the most outrageous characters in children’s literature: Tracy Beaker, the feistiest, funniest 10-year-old ever raised in the dumping ground of a care home.

Now Tracy is back, in a new illustrated book set on a rough housing estate in modern-day London – and this time Tracy is a mother with a challenging nine-year-old daughter of her own.

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Friday, March 9, 2018

Beatrix Potter would not have liked Peter Rabbit film - biographer

Sony adaptation in which James Corden is voice of bullying rabbit would have appalled author

When Walt Disney offered to adapt the Tale of Peter Rabbit for film in 1936, Beatrix Potter did not hesitate: the answer was no.

During her lifetime, the author exercised minute control over the reams of merchandise spun out of her work, which is why Sony Pictures’ new film adaptation would have been anathema to the Lake District author, according to her biographer.

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The best recent science fiction and fantasy novels – reviews roundup

The Gone World by Tom Sweterlitsch; Embers of War by Gareth L Powell; The Bitter Twins by Jen Williams; Spare and Found Parts by Sarah Maria Griffin; All Our Wrong Todays by Elan Mastai

In The Gone World by Tom Sweterlitsch (Headline, £14.99), NCIS agent Shannon Moss looks into the murder of a family and the abduction of their teenage daughter: the prime suspect is a Navy Seal who was lost on a deep space mission years earlier. Agent Moss works on a black ops programme that utilises time travel as an aid to its investigations, and she journeys into the future in order to track down the kidnapped girl and the killer. As if this were not a thrilling enough premise, Sweterlitsch stirs an intriguing end-of-the-world scenario into the mix. In every possible future investigated by naval agents, the world has come to an end – and the “Terminus” event is destined to destroy Moss’s timeline, too. How the murder inquiry and the enigma of the terminal event are linked is just one of the many enjoyable aspects of this dark, page-turning SF thriller; another is the character of Moss. Driven by the loss of a childhood friend and her own traumas in adulthood, she is a resilient, vulnerable and likable protagonist.

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Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Women's prize for fiction reveals 'outward-looking' longlist

Judges acclaim the boldness of a 16-strong selection that ranges from a future utopia to the arrival of a mermaid in Georgian London

From murderers to mermaids, the “whole wealth of experience” features on the longlist for the 2018 Women’s prize for fiction, according to chair of judges Sarah Sands, giving the lie to “that stereotype of women’s fiction”.

The 16-strong longlist for the £30,000 award for “excellence, originality and accessibility in writing by women in English from throughout the world”, was announced on Thursday. The award, previously known as the Baileys prize, places two major names, Pulitzer winner Jennifer Egan and Booker winner Arundhati Roy, up against six debuts. The latter include Gail Honeyman’s Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine, which won the Costa first novel award, and Imogen Hermes Gowar’s The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock, a tale set in Georgian London in which a mermaid is captured.

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Three women go public with Sherman Alexie sexual harassment allegations

NPR says 10 women in total have approached them with accusations against the author, who made a public apology last week for his ‘poor decisions’

Three female writers have gone on record with accusations of sexual harassment against the acclaimed Native American author Sherman Alexie.

Alexie, who has won a National Book Award and a PEN/Faulkner prize for his writing, issued an apology last week in the wake of a series of anonymous and unspecified allegations of harassment. Although at that point no women had spoken on the record to the media, Seattle author Litsa Dremousis alleged on Twitter that a number of women had been in touch with her to recount their stories.

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Corbyn calls for statue to feminist pioneer Mary Wollstonecraft

‘Bronze ceiling’ for author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman should go, say MPs

The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, and his deputy, Tom Watson, have teamed up with dozens of men, including high-profile actors, comedians and trade union leaders, to call for one of Britain’s earliest feminists to be memorialised.

Related: Mary Wollstonecraft must finally have her statue

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Writers learn they have won life-changing Windham-Campbell prizes

Judged in secret, eight English-language authors are set to hear of $165,000 awards, intended to give them financial freedom

The lives of eight writers are set to be transformed on Wednesday, when they receive a phone call from the director of the Windham-Campbell prizes, informing them that they have each won a $165,000 (£119,000) award that is intended to give them the freedom to write, liberated from money worries.

Recipients, who this year include British writer Olivia Laing and Jamaican poet Lorna Goodison, are nominated confidentially and judged anonymously. The first time they will learn that they were in the running will be when programme director Michael Kelleher calls them to let them know they have won. Kelleher said making the calls was his “highlight of the year, as each cycle I hear how much of a difference it will make for them”.

Related: Separating art from life always needs the most delicate touch | Olivia Laing

Related: Suzan-Lori Parks: 'People in America are often encouraged not to think'

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Monday, March 5, 2018

Philip Pullman calls for authors to get fairer share of publisher profits

His Dark Materials author condemns way book industry ‘allows corporate profits to be so high at a time when author earnings are markedly falling’

Philip Pullman has called on publishers to stop damaging “the ecology of the book world” and start giving authors a fairer share of the money their books earn.

Speaking in his capacity as president of the Society of Authors, the His Dark Materials author hit out at the fact that while profit margins in publishing are rising, the money authors are paid is going down.

The decision to become an author often means eschewing the security of a stable job.

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Shakespeare himself may have annotated 'Hamlet' book, claims researcher

Notes made on a 16th-century manuscript, thought to have been an inspiration for the play, could have been the Bard’s own, says John Casson

Annotations in the margins of a 16th-century text that is believed to have been one of the sources for Hamlet could have been made by Shakespeare himself, according to an independent researcher.

John Casson was looking through the British Library’s copy of François de Belleforest’s Histoires Tragiques, a 1576 French text thought to have been one of the sources for Shakespeare’s tragedy: it features the story of how a Danish prince, Amleth, avenges his father’s murder by his uncle, the latter going on to marry his mother, Geruthe.

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Sunday, March 4, 2018

James Ivory is oldest Oscar winner ever with screenplay award for Call Me by Your Name

The 89 year-old Room with a View director won his first Oscar for his adaptation of the impassioned gay romance novel

Oscars 2018: the red carpet, the winners, the speeches – live

James Ivory has won the Oscar for best adapted screenplay at the 90th Academy awards for his work on the film Call Me By Your Name, adapted from André Aciman’s novel of the same name. At 89, Ivory is the oldest ever winner of an Academy award; it is his first win after three previous nominations in the best director category, for the films A Room with a View, Howard’s End, and The Remains of the Day.

Wearing a shirt emblazoned with the face of Call Me By Your Name star Timothée Chalamet, Ivory thanked his deceased Merchant-Ivory partners Ismail Merchant and Ruth Prawer Jhabvala as well as André Aciman.

Related: Call Me By Your Name review – gorgeous gay love story seduces and overwhelms

Related: Call Me By Your Name’s Oscar-tipped double act on their summer of love

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Who put the spark in Frankenstein’s monster?

On the 200th anniversary of Mary Shelley’s gothic horror, a new edition discusses its roots in experiments with electricity on the dead

It is one of the most famous novels of all time, often cited as the first work of science fiction, with a genesis almost as well known as its terrifying central character.

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: or the Modern Prometheus was published 200 years ago in 1818, when she was just 21. It was the result of a challenge laid down in 1816 by Lord Byron, when Shelley and her lover – later her husband – Byron’s fellow poet Percy Bysshe Shelley were holidaying at Lake Geneva in Switzerland.

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Who put the spark in Frankenstein’s monster?

On the 200th anniversary of Mary Shelley’s gothic horror, a new edition discusses its roots in experiments with electricity on the dead

It is one of the most famous novels of all time, often cited as the first work of science fiction, with a genesis almost as well known as its terrifying central character.

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: or the Modern Prometheus was published 200 years ago in 1818, when she was just 21. It was the result of a challenge laid down in 1816 by Lord Byron, when Shelley and her lover – later her husband – Byron’s fellow poet Percy Bysshe Shelley were holidaying at Lake Geneva in Switzerland.

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On my radar: Audrey Niffenegger’s cultural highlights

The writer on the latest Laurie Anderson release, enjoying the Syfy channel and the London gallery she’s fallen in love with

Audrey Niffenegger is an American writer and artist born in Michigan in 1963 and now living in Chicago. In 1997, she had an idea for a sci-fi romance graphic novel about involuntary time travel. It became The Time Traveler’s Wife, her bestselling 2003 debut novel (and subsequently a film). Her books since include Her Fearful Symmetry, The Night Bookmobile, and Raven Girl. Bizarre Romance, a collaboration with her husband, Eddie Campbell, is out now (Jonathan Cape).

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Saturday, March 3, 2018

Michele Hanson, warm, witty and much-loved columnist, dies age 75

Author who wrote for the Guardian for more than 30 years has stroke after walking her dogs

Tributes have been paid to the Guardian columnist Michele Hanson, who died on Friday.

Hanson, 75, whose popular weekly column focused on her “phenomenally full and interesting” life, suffered a stroke and fell into a coma on Thursday lunchtime.

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The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton review – Quantum Leap meets Agatha Christie

With time loops, body swaps and a psychopathic footman, this is a dazzling take on the murder mystery

Some books are a gift to the marketing department. The folks at Raven, a newish crime imprint at Bloomsbury, have described this one as “Gosford Park meets Inception, by way of Agatha Christie”. It’s a good tagline, but they might just as well have chosen “An Instance of the Fingerpost meets Battle Royale via Punchdrunk theatre”, or “Quantum Leap crossed with The Bone Clocks and Zork”, or “Cluedo meets Groundhog Day by way of The GCHQ Puzzle Book (with a twist!)”.

So yes, it is derivative, but that’s not meant as a criticism. Stuart Turton, a debut novelist, has drawn on half a dozen familiar tropes from popular culture and reworked them into something altogether fresh and memorable. His murder mystery takes place in the classic setting of the 1920s country house, but right from the start, you know you’re far from Hercule Poirot territory.

As each morning brings the victims back to life, mur­der comes to seem no more dreadful than flicking off a light switch

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Friday, March 2, 2018

Re-enter Sandman: Neil Gaiman's comics return with new writers

Bestselling author appoints a team of four fantasy writers for the launch of the Sandman Universe later this year

Neil Gaiman is to oversee a new line of comic books set in the world of the Sandman, continuing the adventures of some of his best-loved characters including Dream of the Endless and Lucien the librarian.

The Sandman Universe line, published by DC’s Vertigo imprint, will kick off in August with a story plotted by Gaiman and co-written by Simon Spurrier, Nalo Hopkinson, Dan Watters and Kat Howard. The first comic will, said the publisher, “reintroduce the Sandman Universe and its characters”. This will be followed by the launch of four new series, each written by one of the authors.

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via Science fiction | The Guardian http://ift.tt/2GWK6QL

Re-enter Sandman: Neil Gaiman's comics return with new writers

Bestselling author appoints a team of four fantasy writers for the launch of the Sandman Universe later this year

Neil Gaiman is to oversee a new line of comic books set in the world of the Sandman, continuing the adventures of some of his best-loved characters including Dream of the Endless and Lucien the librarian.

The Sandman Universe line, published by DC’s Vertigo imprint, will kick off in August with a story plotted by Gaiman and co-written by Simon Spurrier, Nalo Hopkinson, Dan Watters and Kat Howard. The first comic will, said the publisher, “reintroduce the Sandman Universe and its characters”. This will be followed by the launch of four new series, each written by one of the authors.

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Poet Ko Un erased from Korean textbooks after sexual harassment claims

The 84-year-old Nobel favourite ‘flatly denies charges of habitual misconduct’, writing in a statement that he had ‘done nothing which might bring shame on my wife or myself’

Korea’s most famous literary export Ko Un, a former Buddhist monk who is often named a frontrunner for the Nobel prize in literature, is at the centre of sexual harassment accusations that have led to his poems being removed from textbooks, and the shuttering of a library established by Seoul local government in his name.

The allegations, which have been “flatly” denied by Ko in a statement provided to the Guardian, first surfaced in the form of a poem by the poet Choi Young-mi. In The Beast, published in December, Choi did not name the major poet she accused of sexual harassment in the poet, instead called him Poet K.

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'We are the people who are desperate beyond emotion': Lou Reed's lost poetry to be published

Poetry reflecting on nationhood, sex and whiskey, written in 1970 after Lou Reed left the Velvet Underground, is to be published for the first time

“We are the crystal gaze returned through the density and immensity of a berserk nation.” It’s a line that could have been written by an angry young poet from Trump’s America, but it was actually penned decades previously, by the bard of New York’s grimy rock’n’roll underbelly: Lou Reed.

A collection of the songwriter’s previously unseen poems will be published later this year, along with recordings of him performing them at St Mark’s Church, New York, in 1971 (with Allen Ginsberg in the audience). The book, entitled Do Angels Need Haircuts? and published in April, will also feature an afterword by his widow Laurie Anderson, as well as Reed’s own introductions to the poems. Of the 12 poems and short stories in the collection, only three have been published before, one as a Velvet Underground song and two in small-press poetry zines.

We are the people without land. We are the people without tradition. We are the people who do not know how to die peacefully and at ease. We are the thoughts of sorrows. Endings of tomorrows. We are the wisps of rulers and the jokers of kings.

We are the people without right. We are the people who have known only lies and desperation. We are the people without a country, a voice or a mirror. We are the crystal gaze returned through the density and immensity of a berserk nation. We are the victims of the untold manifesto of the lack of depth of full and heavy emptiness.

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Thursday, March 1, 2018

Discworld: Terry Pratchett's City Watch headed for TV adaptation

Screenwriter Simon Allen attached to project called The Watch, featuring the characters of the Ankh Morpork police department

Terry Pratchett’s beloved Discworld novels may be about to return to the small screen, with new reports that BBC Studios is developing a TV series based on his work.

Rumours have circulated for some years of a series in development based on Pratchett’s novels featuring the characters of the Ankh Morpork City Watch, the police department of the Discworld’s fictional metropolis. Speculation was renewed on Friday with Deadline reporting that BBC Studios is working on such a project, titled The Watch, and that screenwriter and producer Simon Allen is attached to it.

Related: The art of Terry Pratchett's Discworld – in pictures

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Domesday book lent to British Library for Anglo-Saxon exhibition

Survey of England that William the Conqueror commissioned in 1085 to go rare display

Domesday, the earliest public record and perhaps the most famous book in English history, is to be lent to the British Library for a landmark exhibition on the Anglo-Saxons.

The National Archives announced on Friday that it was lending one of its most prized possessions, the great survey of England commissioned by William the Conqueror in 1085, two decades after his Norman forces defeated King Harold at the Battle of Hastings.

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Author Sherman Alexie apologizes amid sexual misconduct allegations

‘Over the years, I have done things that have harmed other people, including those I love most deeply’

Prominent author Sherman Alexie issued an apology Wednesday amid multiple allegations of sexual misconduct.

“Over the years, I have done things that have harmed other people, including those I love most deeply,” Alexie said in a statement released to The Seattle Times late Wednesday. “To those whom I have hurt, I genuinely apologize. I am so sorry.”
Allegations against Alexie have been vague, referring to unwanted advances and inappropriate remarks and to threats against fellow Native Americans.

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Home entertainment spending overtakes print sales for first time

UK music, video and games sales higher than those of magazines, books and newspapers last year

The soaring popularity of services like Netflix, Amazon and Spotify has pushed the amount consumers spend on home entertainment products past the amount spent on books, magazines and newspapers for the first time.

UK consumers spent a record £7.2bn last year on all forms of music, video and games, from CDs, DVDs and vinyl records to console software and subscriptions to music and TV streaming services.

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Northamptonshire announces 'heavily reduced' libraries plan – on World Book Day

County council implements timetable with immediate effect, leaving 21 libraries open just one day a week – and one food bank to find new location

Brackley Library, according to its website, is “a welcoming community hub offering regular events and activities for all ages”. But swingeing cuts at Northamptonshire county council mean that it, along with 21 other libraries in the region, will now only be open one day a week, for eight hours – an announcement made on World Book Day, and effective immediately.

This drastic cutback comes on top of the crisis-ridden council’s decision, announced earlier this week, to close 21 libraries – not the same 21 – across the county, with eight large branches retained. The move was made following a consultation with locals, and follows protests and petitions from thousands of residents, and authors including local Alan Moore and Philip Pullman.

Related: Northamptonshire adult care services 'on verge of being unsafe'

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