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Fiction and nonfiction to look out for in 2019

We look ahead to rich offerings in next year’s genre-challenging nonfiction list and thrilling new fiction writing for all tastes

The beginning of 2019 promises a genuine thrill in terms of genre-defying nonfiction, when Julia Blackburn publishes Time Song: Searching for Doggerland (Cape, February), in which she tells the story of the huge, fertile plain that once connected the east of England with mainland Europe using a singular combination of memoir, verse and story. Like lots of people, I adored Blackburn’s last book, Threads, a biography of a fisherman-turned-embroiderer called John Craske, and I expect this one to be every bit as charming and strange. It will also be timely, for by then – just maybe – we’ll once again be about to break away from Europe, albeit in a somewhat different manner than occurred in 5,000 BC.

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from Culture | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2GMypRI

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