Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Ben Kingsley / What I’ve Learned

 

Ben Kingsley
Photo by AUSTIN HARGRAVE

What I’ve Learned: Sir Ben Kingsley

Actor; 81; Oxfordshire, England

Interview By Henry Wong
11 December 2025

Sir Ben Kingsley is one of the most acclaimed and prolific stage, film, and television actors of his generation, with a career spanning more than five decades. He won an Oscar for Best Actor for his role in Gandhi (1982). Kingsley appears in the comedy The Thursday Murder Club, out now on Netflix. This interview was conducted on July 4.

Kristen Stewart / What I’ve Learned

 


Kristen Stewart
Photo by Adir Abergel

What I’ve Learned: Kristen Stewart

Actress, writer, director; 35; Los Angeles.

Interview By Anthony Breznican
9 december 2025

Kristen Stewart has been acting since the age of nine and was a teen herself when she starred in the Twilight films. She’s made her feature directing and writing debut with The Chronology of Water, an adaptation of Lidia Yuknavitch’s 2011 memoir. In April, Stewart tied the knot with her longtime girlfriend, screenwriter Dylan Meyer. This interview was conducted on November 2.

Gracie Abrams and Kaia Gerber on Therapy, Taylor, and Unrequited Crushes

 

Gracie Abrams

Gracie Abrams wears Top Bode. Jeans Gracie’s own. Earrings (worn throughout) Stylist’s Own.


Gracie Abramsand Kaia Gerberon Therapy,Taylor, andUnrequited Crushes


Gracie Abrams is over sad-girl music. After making a mark as a moody singer-songwriter and opening for megastars like Olivia Rodrigo and Taylor Swift, the 24-year-old is stepping into her feel-better era with a sophomore album that still mines the bittersweet ache of young love, but with a smirk. Ahead of the release of The Secret of Us, the Los Angeles-born musician got on a call with her friend Kaia Gerber to talk about unrequited crushes, exposure therapy, and spinning out.

Monday, February 23, 2026

Peter Bradshaw’s Baftas 2026 predictions – who’ll get the gongs, who’ll be the goners?

 



Peter Bradshaw’s Baftas 2026 predictions – who’ll get the gongs, who’ll be the goners?

Will Paul Thomas Anderson’s ICE age conspiracy thriller sweep the board, or will Sinners and Hamnet share some glory? Our critic places his bets


Peter Bradshaw

Sunday 22 February 2026

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Nothing in Her Way by Charles Williams

 



Nothing in Her Way: Charles Williams 

“There’s always a warning, if you’ll listen to it. It buzzes when you’re playing cards with strangers and get an almost perfect hand.”

Nothing in Her Way, American author Charles Williams’s fifth novel is completely different from his earlier work. In common with Hill GirlRiver Girl, and Hell hath no Fury, the narrator is a lone male whose life becomes complicated by a woman, but  Nothing in her Way, is primarily about an elaborate con which begins when narrator, Mike Belen crosses paths, once again with his red-headed ex-wife, a knockout called Cathy. Mike had almost forgotten about Cathy, but now she’s back and once more in her presence, her former power over Mike returns. Mike acknowledges “she was a whirlpool I was trapped in,” and while he thinks he knows this woman better than anyone else, she still manages to deliver some surprises–none of them pleasant. Cold and calculating, Cathy always plays the long game.

River Girl by Charles Williams

 



River Girl: Charles Williams 

“It’s men, I tell you. They never should let ’em out alone.”

River Girl is the third novel I’ve read by American crime author Charles Williams, and it’s the best of the three. I didn’t think I’d find one that topped Hell Hath No Fury so when I tell you that River Girl, published in 1951, soars to the number one spot for Charles Williams novels read so far, then that should give you an idea of just how good this tidy, desperate, dark noir novel is. Told initially in a laid-back style by the amoral narrator, Deputy Jack Marshall, the story’s pace picks up, increasing its tone of claustrophobic desperation as Jack’s life spins out of control. 

Big City Girl by Charles Williams




Big City Girl: Charles Williams 

“Once they get you in there in the pen, there ain’t no long-nose bastards  writing about you and talking about you on the radio. Not till maybe thirty years from now, when they might let you out if you behave yourself, or till someday they kill you if you don’t.”

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Review / Dead Calm by Charles Williams

 


Dead Calm (1962) by Charles Williams

What happens when four unstable personalities are trapped together in a tiny cabin on a boat lost and without power in the middle of the South Pacific? How does those four individuals deal with the constantly worsening situation as the boat starts to take on water and rot away? Do the couples wrap themselves up in petty jealousies and bickering? Do they blame each other when things start to go wrong? What happens when one of these people was a bit off his rocker to begin with? Can he really be blamed for what goes wrong? Consumed by paranoia, agoraphobia, claustrophobia, what if he abandons the slowly sinking ship and climbs onto another small sailing vessel? Will the couple on that vessel take him away from there – from where his wife was possibly plotting with another man to drown him in that mighty ocean?

Charles Williams / The lost classics of one of the 20th century’s great hard-boiled writers

 



THE LOST CLASSICS OF ONE OF THE 20TH CENTURY'S GREAT HARD-BOILED WRITERS

Fifty years on, Charles Williams' novels remain almost unbearably gripping.

Andrew Carmel
7 August 2020

I’ve never forgotten what John Huston wrote about the work of W.R. Burnett—“There are moments of reality in all those books that are quite overpowering. More than once they had me breaking into a sweat.” When I think of the crime novels of Charles Williams, I know exactly what he means.

Charles Williams / A Touch of Death / Review

 


Charles Williams
A TOUCH OF DEATH (from 2008)


I spent a good share of last night reading Hard Case Crime's snappy edition of A Touch of Death by Charles Williams and I'll say what I've said before about this book. It likely has more plot turns than just about any suspense novel I can ever recall reading. 

A Touch of Death by Charles Williams

 

Charles Williams

A Touch of Death by Charles Williams

I’m not going to lie, I’m a comparative newcomer to crime fiction and mysteries. A driving reason I read Hard Case Crime is because I want to familiarize myself with quality authors other than Hammett, Chandler, and Goodis, and so far that’s been a rousing success—there’s no such thing as a “bad” Hard Case, so it’s been a good learning experience. Anyways. Charles Williams was a crime writer from the Gold Medal stable, but not just another Gold Medal writer. He’s been called an under-appreciated genius by people like Ed Gorman and Bill Crider on Mystery File, and there’s a large consensus rating Williams’ HCC entry, A Touch of Death, as the best in the line. I’m interested, but somewhat skeptical; a half-dozen reviews called Richard S. Prather’s The Peddler a masterwork of American crime lit, and I was left underwhelmed after that high praise.

Mistery Files / Charles Williams

 



Charles Williams

                                

THE GOLD MEDAL CORNER, by Bill Crider


    Here’s the back cover blurb:

    The author of the hour!

    He wrote HILL GIRL for you.

    He wrote BIG CITY GIRL for you.

    Now he has written for you his third and greatest GOLD MEDAL NOVEL:  RIVER GIRL – the story of a man and a woman who met and knew instantly that not all the world could tear them apart.


    If you already know that the guy who wrote those books for you is Charles Williams, then you probably already know that he, like Dan J. Marlowe from last time, is one of the people who belongs in the Gold Medal Pantheon. 

Friday, February 20, 2026

Georgi Gospodinov / ‘Jorge Luis Borges gave me an exhilarating sense of freedom’

 

Georgi Gospodinov

  

The 

Books

 0f my 

life



Georgi Gospodinov: ‘Jorge Luis Borges gave me an exhilarating sense of freedom’

The Bulgarian Booker winner on the letter he wrote to JD Salinger, the allure of Homer’s Odyssey and the magic of Thomas Mann


Georgi Gospodinov
Friday 20 Feb 2026


My earliest reading memory
I was taught to read quite early, at five or six, probably so that I would sit quietly and not be a nuisance to the adults. And it worked. Once I’d entered a book, I didn’t want to come out. I remember how Hans Christian Andersen’s The Little Match Girl turned my heart upside down. I was living with my grandmother at the time, and I cried under the blanket, terrified that one day she, too, would die.

My favourite book growing up
I read greedily and indiscriminately, picking books at random from my parents’ library. Thomas Mayne Reid’s adventure novels were favourites, especially The Headless Horseman. Jack London’s Martin Eden, too. Clearly, the idea of being both a hero and a writer appealed to me. Writers were not usually heroes. I also loved a textbook on criminology, which explained how to make invisible ink, what traces criminals leave behind, and so on – matters of extraordinary importance to any 10-year-old boy.

The author that changed me as a teenager
All novels that contained erotic scenes – because of the acute shortage of eroticism in the late socialist Bulgaria of the 1980s. Also around that time I discovered JD Salinger. I reread his stories obsessively, without being sure I understood everything. At 17, I decided to write him a letter, trying to provoke him into breaking his silence. Of course, I never sent it. Much later, that story found its way into my memoir, The Story Smuggler.

The writer who changed my mind
Jorge Luis Borges. When the first translations of his work appeared in Bulgaria, I was 21, shortly before the wall fell – a crucial moment. It was as if I suddenly understood what literature is capable of, and how there are no real borders between genres. I had an exhilarating sense of freedom, but also of a shared secret. Memory, erudition, heart, science and myth – all of it was there.

The book that made me want to be a writer
The poems of two tragic Bulgarian poets: Peyo Yavorov and Nikola Vaptsarov. I began writing poetry in secret. Later, I was found out.

The book I reread
Homer’s Odyssey. We probably mentioned it or read parts of it at school, and perhaps that was what put me off it for so long. After turning 40, I began to truly understand it – and to reread it, seeing it differently each time. The theme of the father increasingly drew me in, the bond between father and son. Then there’s the great theme of return – not only the return home but also to the past – and memory, the question of who remembers us unconditionally and recognises us, like the dog. In my last two novels I have been in dialogue with this book again and again.

The book I discovered later in life
Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain. It always stood out on my bookshelf, but for years I never reached for it. I imagined it would be very gloomy, heavy, full of endless reflection. When I read it in my late 40s it wasn’t love at first sight, but the story didn’t let me go. I love books I can converse with, even enter into Socratic arguments with. It was very important to me while I was writing Time Shelter. You think you write in solitude, but in truth you are in constant dialogue with other books and authors.

The book I am currently reading
The Books of Jacob by Olga Tokarczuk. A powerful novel that seems, like Borges’s maps, to try to contain the world – and time – at a scale of 1:1. A book for slow winter reading.

 Death and the Gardener by Georgi Gospodinov is published by W&N. 


THE GUARDIAN


Fake noses, lucky tokens and a bed of nails – Sarah Jessica Parker, Joseph Fiennes and other stars reveal their secret dressing room routines

 




Sarah Jessica Parker: ‘The details matter.’
Photograph: David Levene


Fake noses, lucky tokens and a bed of nails – Sarah Jessica Parker, Joseph Fiennes and other stars reveal their secret dressing room routines

This article is more than 1 year old
Sarah Jessica Parker: ‘The details matter.’ Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

Whoever wins next month’s Olivier awards, global stars will continue to flock to the West End of London to give the stage their all. We take a peek behind the curtain …

By David Levene and Miriam Gillinson


At what point does the transformation process start, as an actor prepares to get into character backstage? For Jared Harris – who recently starred in Harold Pinter’s The Homecoming – it begins en route to the Young Vic, with a meditative stroll across Golden Jubilee Bridge. While performing as Gareth Southgate in Dear England, Joseph Fiennes began his preparations with a quiet cup of tea. Ken Nwosu, playing Othello at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, delays getting into role until the very last moment: “I wanna be me for as long as I can before the show begins.”