Summer reading 2023: Our pick of the best books for the beach
Our list ranges from sharp-eyed social satires to a Killing Eve-style thriller about a heroine bent on revenge
France on Trial review: The Case of Marshal Pétain - Jewish saviour or antisemite?
The reputation of France’s wartime leader comes under the microscope in Julian Jackson's scholarly work
The Jewish tennis star banned by the Nazis who went on to play at Wimbledon
Author Felice Hardy on the extraordinary story of her grandmother, which she tells in her new book
The Trial book review: Is there anything Rob Rinder can't do?
A sparely written and enjoyable page-turner from the barrister turned TV personality
German school textbooks show ‘strong anti-Israel bias’, report claims
Report reveals a disturbing trend of blaming Jewish state for the conflict with the Palestinians
Meet the ‘Jewish American hero’ whose bookstore is improving the world
The story is the focus of a warm and quirky documentary released this week
David Baddiel: ‘It’s not completely true that I have no attachment to Israel’
Author of Jews Don't Count U-turns on his 2020 tweet: 'I don’t care about stupid f***ing Israel' in JC podcast
Quest to discover the lost actress of Vilnius who is full of mystery
Diplomat Meryl Frank spent years tracing the wartime fate of her Lithuanian relative. But the truth was sitting on her bookshelf
Why is Avi Shlaim recycling the ‘Baghdad bombings’ theory?
Shlaim’s theory is far from conclusive
Writer Adam Kay says life 'absolutely transformed' by babies
The This Is Going To Hurt author revealed he has had two children via surrogacy
The Cameraman review: Suspense in short supply in evocation of the Thirties
The English Passengers novelist returns with a disappointingly flat story about a cinematographer on a tour of fascist Europe
This Is Europe: The Way We Live Now review - All of human life is here
Ben Judah broadens the scope of his epic feat of reportage on contemporary London to take in the relentless unpredictability of everyday life on the continent
The Washington Post reporter who decided to novelise the Israel-Palestine conflict
Journalist Ruth Marks Eglash’s day job is writing about the Middle East. But when her Israeli children started asking about tensions in the region, she struggled to answer. So she turned to fiction
Hitler, Stalin, Mum and Dad review: An epic tale of a family’s struggle
Daniel Finkelstein's family memoir manages to tell an intimate story on a grand scale
Could Jews hold the secret to healing broken Britain?
Patriotism can calm the immigration debate, end the culture wars and unite communities — and Jews have it in abundance, argues the author of a new book
The exodus of the German 'creative thinkers' as Hitler seized control of Germany
Study of the creative exodus from the Nazis in 1933 is a timeless reminder of what is lost when a regime denies its own writers their voice
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