CHRIS SEARLE welcomes a startling vision of contemporary Newport from a veteran photographer of the British working class
The Well Deceived
by Isaac Kuhnberg
(Clink Street Publishing, £9.99)
READING this novel is a little like singlehandedly putting a cover over a double duvet — a real struggle.
The pseudonymous author attempts to create a world marginally out of register with that of Britain in the 1950s and the reader is trapped for a time in a parlour game of working out what geographically is what, with Alba being Scotland-ish and Anglia England-ish.
RICHARD SHILLCOCK examines an enjoyable, but philosophically conventional book, and urges Marxists to employ their capacity to embrace the totality in any explanation
GORDON PARSONS is intrigued by a biography of the Marxist intellectual and author, made from the point of view of his son
MARJORIE MAYO welcomes an account of family life after Oscar Wilde, a cathartic exercise, written by his grandson
JULIA THOMAS unpicks the mental processes that explain why book-to-film adaptations so often disappoint


