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The must-read novels, memoirs and history books of the year: if you're looking
for a new book to read, this is a good place to start
The best books of 2014&
Looking for something new to read? From the best children's and poetry books to failsafe gift and cookery books, you will find exactly what you are looking for.
There are superb history books to mark the anniversary of the Great War, art and photography books, as well as the best of the year's celebrity memoirs, and of course, the best fiction.
Best fiction of 2014
(Chatto, 464pp)
A haunting story of POWs on the notorious Burma railway, which won the Man Booker prize
Read our review of
(Galley Beggar)
This experimental novel was the surprise winner of the Goldsmiths Prize and the Balieys Prize. It took nine years to find a publisher.
Read our review of .
(Harper Collins, 310pp)
Winner of the overall Costa Prize, Nathan Filer's debut novel is an unsettling read but a perceptive and moving one.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Hutchinson, 304pp)
Helen Dunmore's ambitious tale wavers between ghost story and a study of war trauma.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Faber, 176pp)
An enjoyably unsentimental journey into the chaotic streets of Lagos, Nigeria.
Read the Telegraph's review of
(Sceptre, 288pp)
An unnerving debut that explores the recesses of a disarrayed mind.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Picador, 336pp)
A wonderful novel about Hemingway and the women who adored him.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Jonathan Cape, 208pp)
David Grossman's latest work revisits complex ideas about love and loss.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Fourth Estate, 272pp)
The past casts a long shadow in this collection of first-rate short stories.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Little, Brown, 208pp)
E L Doctorow's bleak, oddly unreal novel is an intriguing new departure.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Faber, 192pp)
A superb short story collection by a brave master of the form.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Bloomsbury, 272pp)
A riotously imaginative collection of stories.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Atlantic Books, 368pp)
Damon Galgut has produced a sly fictional account of the travels that made EM Forster's greatest work possible.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Harvil Secker, 496pp)
Karl Ove Knausgaard&#x2019;s multi-volume fictional memoir has made him notorious, and the world&#x2019;s best critics clamour for the next volume.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Faber, 268pp)
The Temporary Gentleman is a novel of dissolution, but its poetry is so strong-pulsed that we find ourselves lost in language.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Little, Brown, 255pp)
These stories by BJ Novak &#x2013; 'Ryan the Temp' in the American Office &#x2013; show a brilliant comic talent.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Hamish Hamilton, 288pp)
Devilishly close observation makes Lydia Davis's short stories a triumph.
Read The Telegraph's review of.
(Pushkin Press, 538pp)
Buwulda's debut novel is one wild ride: a swirling helix of a family saga that swerves from gross-out sex comedy to pitch-black revenge tragedy.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Atlantic, 384pp)
A novel about a musician on the run from the FBI is also a lyrical reflection on art.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Faber, 336pp)
This tragicomic story of a suicide bursts with ramshackle, precious life
Read the Telegraph's review of
(352pp, Viking)
An ambitious novelist who finds comedy in everyday crises
Read the Telegraph's review of
(Sceptre, 256p)
An impressive portrait of compromised friendship and global politics.
Read the Telegraph's review of
(Simon & Schuster, 274pp)
A fine collection of stories finds the drama in everyday life
Read the Telegraph's review of
(Virago, 320pp)
Seventies radicalism comes vividly to life in a compelling university novel
Read the Telegraph review of
(624pp, Fourth Estate)
A beautiful book, both profound and funny. It is a powerful invocation to live a life of joy, surrounded by true friends.
Read the Telegraph review of
(Picador, 432pp)
Golden Age Amsterdam comes to life in this finely crafted debut.
Read the Telegraph review of
(368pp, Bloomsbury)
Francesca Wade salutes a lyrical treasure on the Man Booker longlist.
Read the Telegraph review of
Will Self&#x2019;s sequel to the Booker-shortlisted Umbrella is urgent, necessary and disturbing
Read the Telegraph review of
Rachel Cusk&#x2019;s daring use of an almost silent narrator speaks volumes
Read the Telegraph review of
Sarah Waters&#x2019;s sensational novel won&#x2019;t disappoint her legion of fans.
Read the Telegraph Review of
David Mitchell&#x2019;s consoling fantasies are both popular and critically acclaimed. How does he do it?
Read the Telegraph review of
An heir to Virginia Woolf, Ali Smith subtly but surely reinvents the novel.
Read the Telegraph review of
(Jonathan Cape)
Society lies broken in Howard Jacobson&#x2019;s new satire, the most unsettling novel of the author&#x2019;s career
Read the Telegraph review of
(Europa, 416pp)
Elena Ferrante&#x2019;s real identity is unknown, but her novels reveal her genius
Read the Telegraph review of
(192pp, Melville House)
A clever satire on academic life that is also a love letter to the world of ideas
Read the Telegraph review of
Best biographies and memoirs of 2014
(Cape, 368pp)
Pierpont's book manages the difficult feat of remaining both warm-hearted and critically balanced. The result is a useful key to Roth's work.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Hamish Hamilton, 368pp)
This self-portrait of a Soviet Jew transplanted aged seven from Leningrad to Eighties America is a masterpiece of comic deprecation.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Atlantic, 575pp)
This study of the scramble for territory in the collapsing Ottoman Empire is a masterpiece of detachment and a work of tantalising fascination.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Jonathan Cape, 729pp)
A splendid tribute to one of the greatest British politicians and writers of the last century.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(John Murray, 288pp)
The Christchurch earthquake leads Lloyd Jones to unearth a sad story of shame, deception and rejection.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Granta, 238pp)
Casting her eye back over her teenage diaries, Ehrenreich writes like a dream, elegantly carrying the reader with her.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Harper, 576pp)
Begley's biography shows just how closely and relentlessly Updike mined his own life for fiction.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Bloomsbury, 508pp)
The story of this remarkable life is so well told, with a rare combination of pace, verve and scholarship, that the reader is soon a daily visitor to the Marx household.
Read the Telegraph's review of .
(Atlantic, 304pp)
Marion Coutts' account of the death of her husband, Tom Lubbock, has the power to astound.
Read the Telegraph's review of
(Quercus, 592pp)
A chilling portrait of Jimmy Savile by a journalist who has spent much of his life obsessing over him.
Read the Telegraph's review of
Best history books of 2014
(544pp, Allen Lane)
A fascinating account of 10 cities that were shaped by, and helped shape, British rule
Read the Telegraph's review of
(Viking, 432pp)
A moving and myth-confronting account of 1914.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Atlantic, 784pp)
A magnificently sweeping history of seafaring that travels from Europe to Asia.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Bodley Head, 433pp)
An impressive history of a persecuted religious minority in England ready to die &#x2013; and kill &#x2013; for their faith.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Hurst, 325pp)
In just 300 pages, Christopher Coker provides an unusually rewarding analysis of war, fiction and history.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Jonathan Cape, 464pp)
This dynamic new history evokes the restless spirit of the Viking world.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Fig Tree, 528pp)
Chris Laoutaris asks whether a busybody noblewoman changed the course of theatrical history.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Virago, 434pp)
Crimes of passion become gripping case studies in this enthralling, gruesome history of 19th century women.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Faber, 554pp)
A superb study of Churchill&#x2019;s little-known interest in atomic weapons claims Churchill as the first British prime minister to foresee the potential of the nuclear age.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(John Murray, 400pp)
A gem-like history of the stolen necklace that destroyed a queen.
Read the Telegraph's review of
(Oneworld, 496pp)
A masterful account of the collapse of the Soviet Union
Read the Telegraph's review of
(945pp, Faber & Faber)
Romantic and radical, angry and generous, the composer was the first tortured genius.
Read the Telegraph review of
(656pp, Atlantic)
An expansive biography of Britain&#x2019;s greatest monarch reveals a passionate and humorous woman beneath the stiff exterior.
Read the Telegraph review of
(328pp, Faber)
A timely reappraisal of Joan of Arc.
Read the Telegraph review of
(784pp, Bloomsbury)
Tennessee Williams&#x2019;s melodramatic private life resembled the plots of his great plays
Read the Telegraph review of
(Allen Lane)
Andrew Roberts's Life of Napoleon is witty, humane and unapologetically admiring
Read the Telegraph review of
Best war books of 2014
(Jonathan Cape, 240pp)
A soldier with the soul of a poet has written a remarkable Iraq memoir.
Read the Telegraph's review of
(Chatto & Windus, 326pp)
A revealing portrait of the young assassin who sparked the First World War.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Scribe, 272pp)
A harrowing study of the physical and psychological cost of war on soldiers.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
Was the alliance between Nazism and Stalinism inevitable?
Read the Telegraph's review of
(434pp, Faber)
An epic introduction to the bloody struggle for England&#x2019;s crown
Read the Telegraph's review of
(336pp, Oneworld)
A heroic tale of survival in Burma from the Second World War
Read the Telegraph's review of
Other categories
(Chatto, 320pp)
Is the fate of an obscure mole trivial? Girling would have us believe that, even in the face of epic tragedies, the smallest things still matter. And many readers may agree.
Read the .
(Bloomsbury, 384pp)
The wonderfully idiosyncratic book is taken up with the documentation of Greer&#x2019;s Cave Creek Rainforest Rehabilitation Scheme in Queensland, Australia.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Faber & Faber, 258pp)
Both novelist and coder, Vikram Chandra searches for commonality between literature and programming. Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Allen Lane, 209pp)
The inventor of Gaia Theory argues that humanity's ability to liberate energy and information from the Earth has rapidly outpaced both evolution and the planet's ability to cope.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Princeton, 456pp)
This collection of reviews shows Williams at his engaging best: lucid, cultivated and entirely serious in his determination to extract the essence from the matter he is discussing.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Simon & Schuster, 310pp)
An anthology of tear-jerking poems that is not just for men.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(Faber, 640pp)
Taken as a whole, this collection gives us a kind of narrative &#x2013; the story of a poet who is developing even in his eighties, sustained by faith in what poetic forms can do.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(IB Tauris, 256pp)
A superb study of Virgil's varied afterlife &#x2013; from opera to Hollywood.
Read The Telegraph's review of .
(William Collins, 336pp)
Adam Nicolson dusts down Homer for a new generation.
Read the Telegraph review of .
(384pp, California Press)
A lively account of Roman laughter restores the hurly-burly to the grandeur that was Rome.
Read the Telegraph review of
(352pp, Harvill Secker)
The strange story of how Boris Pasternak&#x2019;s classic novel was used by the CIA to fight the Russians.
Read the Telegraph Review of
(624pp, Simon & Schuster)
A colourful account of Pakistani cricket reclaims this mercurial team from its pariah status
Read the Telegraph review of
(336pp, Bloomsbury)
A journey around China&#x2019;s borders reveals a lawless country outside Beijing&#x2019;s control
Read the Telegraph review of
(320pp, Jonathan Cape)
Joy and sorrow pervades this memoir about the training of a hawk
Read the Telegraph review of
Nick Davies&#x2019;s account of how he exposed the Murdoch empire is as exciting as a thriller
Read the Telegraph review of
A writer&#x2019;s unorthodox wanderings around the Irish capital
Read the Telegraph review of
A breathtaking new book calls for an explosive kind of feminism
Read the Telegraph Review of
Caleb Scharf's new book argues that life beyond Earth may not be as implausible as it seems
Read the Telegraph review of
(Penguin Classics)
Vladimir Nabokov&#x2019;s wife, Véra, was his first reader and his aesthetic barometer, as revealed by his passionate letters to her
Read the Telegraph's review of
The flotsam and jetsam of interwar Europe collide in this wonderfully vivid interwar history
Read the Telegraph's review of
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