MARIA DUARTE, JAMES WALSH and ANDY HEDGECOCK review The Invite, My Father’s Island, Nirvanna: the Band, the Show, the Movie, and Oh My Goodness!
AS AN originator of ranting verse, political activist, journalist and trilingual singer-songwriter multi-instrumentalist — try saying that after five pints of real ale — Attila the Stockbroker’s is a complex and fascinating history which is laid bare in the pages of Arguments Yard.
It’s a riveting read.
Chockfull of hysterically funny and jaw-dropping anecdotes it charts his life on the road and his quest to be a self-sustaining artist, free of the rat-race and its soul-sucking treadmill.
JULIA TOPPIN recommends Patti Smith’s eloquent memoir that wrestles with the beauty and sorrow of a lifetime
Two inspring books — that’s your New Year’s musing from me on January 2 2026
RUTH AYLETT reviews two collections of outright political poetry
From sexual innuendo about Blackpool Rock to Bob Dylan’s ‘God-almighty world,’ the corporation’s classist moral custodianship of pop music has created a roll call of censored artists anyone would feel honoured to join, writes NICK MATTHEWS


