©Otto Dov Kulka
Jan 25, 2013
The devastating account of a survivor sent to Auschwitz as an 11-year-old boy. Simon Schama reviews ‘Landscapes of the Metropolis of Death’, by Otto Dov Kulka
©Getty
From
NON-FICTION
Jan 18, 2013
How unsung innovators and organisers drove the Allies to victory in 1945. Review by David Edgerton
©Paula Byrne
Jan 11, 2013
As Jane Austen’s best-loved novel turns 200, Paula Byrne looks at its roots in the great events of the author’s time
©Press Association
Michael Skapinker
Dec 21, 2012
Three new histories of language and of dictionaries spell out the resistance to linguistic change
©Magnum
Dec 14, 2012
Alan Ryan’s ‘On Politics’ is a triumph of erudition but focuses too heavily on the west, writes John Keane
©bpk/Nationalgalerie, SMB/Bernd Ku
Dec 7, 2012
As the world of print recedes, Andrew Martin reviews ‘Book Was There’ by Andrew Piper, ‘Paper: An Elegy’ by Ian Sansom and Philip Hensher’s ‘The Missing Ink’
©Chris Wormell
Dec 3, 2012
From 3D printing to the perfect Zen garden, FT writers and guests pick their favourite books from the past year
©The Board of Trinity College Dubl
Nov 23, 2012
John Banville on the enduring fascination of the Irish monastic masterpiece
©AP
Philip Stephens
Nov 16, 2012
‘Britain’s Quest for a Role’ by David Hannay, Sherard Cowper-Coles’ ‘Ever the Diplomat’ and the UK’s struggle to exert influence in a post-imperial age
©Getty
Gideon Rachman
Nov 9, 2012
Can the new leaders of the world’s fastest-growing power hold to the mantra of a ‘peaceful rise’ – or are they doomed to clash with competing nations?