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A deluded patriarch sits at the centre of this deliciously evocative novel laced with sex and art
Crises have inspired classics of literature — so is the great Covid-19 novel already under way?
The novelist explores her colour obsession
In times of turmoil, the consolations of the kitchen endure
A seaside stay proves distractingly enjoyable for novelist Charlotte Mendelson
The novelist defends hoarding — and discovers sustenance from an unusual, floral source
When the chips are down nothing beats reading about tired police officers drinking bad coffee
Once one has begun to sense that Fibonacci thrill, one’s daily walks become more interesting
The novelist on the value of verse that nourishes the soul
A heatwave forces the British novelist to retreat to the seaside town of Whitstable, where she finds a forager’s Shangri-La
No one can be prepared for the preposterous perfection of Italy’s capital
Moving from a house to a flat presented the novelist with a unique set of challenges
As the novelist returns to her hometown, nothing is quite as she remembers
The novelist tackles sub-zero temperatures, endless escalators and strange buildings and concludes: perhaps the city isn’t meant for westerners
Beards, borsch and a gleaming white horse — there’s more than art to enjoy in Russia’s former capital
Charlotte Mendelson settles for modest eating and gorging on art during her visit to the city
The novelist and author on why she feels nostalgic about the Scottish city
If it wasn’t for the culture and the shops, would anyone voluntarily live in London?
The former Soviet republic is an adventure in food and hospitality involving multi-course toasts to Mrs Thatcher
The novelist goes on an art-binge and realises that when she’s writing fiction her garden seems irresistible
The novelist and author on her holiday reading and being gastronomically ruined
On a visit to Russia, the novelist makes new intellectual friends and wants to cry as she sees so much beauty
Social barriers come down in 1920s London
Flowers, pah! They’re just a waste of space. The novelist on why her garden is all about ‘growing stuff that I can eat’
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