From Lonely Hearts columns in newspapers, which first appeared in 1786, to the aristocratic cattle market of the London season, to today's instantaneous Tinder 'likes' and 'dislikes', which may be followed up, with luck, by an assignation in Nando's, 'the UK's most popular venue for a first date', people have always been keen to pair off.
NEW FICTION
- MUST READS Paul died in 2015, aged 37, but his best-selling memoir is far more than a beautifully written account of a life cut cruelly short: it is a meditation on living well. It is not about how long but how well we live.
- LITERARY FICTION Auster's exploration of the arbitrariness of individual fate and of how a minor tweak in a story can provoke a major outcome, is, for all its great length, always engaging and readable.
- THRILLERS This articulate thriller, with its central mystery of an unsolved murder in Princeton 25 years ago, is told from a series of perspectives, provoking the reader to ask questions.
- YOUNG FICTION After the deserved success of his debut, Time Travelling With A Hamster, Ross Welford returns with the notoriously difficult second book...
- RETRO READS If it's laughter you're after - it's 1941, wartime Britain, in a Thames town backwater boarding house. Events lead to a 'feminine feud unparalleled in boarding house history'.
- SHORT STORIES You cannot help feeling that Tessa Hadley is just one book away from becoming a household name.
- HISTORICAL It's 1936: The Nazis occupy the Rhineland, Stalin's Great Terror is under way, Spain is divided by civil war and, besotted by Mrs Simpson, Edward VIII threatens to abdicate.
THIS WEEK'S PAPERBACKS
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Darwin's beard hid his eczema, Gladstone had a finger missing and Tennyson suffered rotten teeth: The SECRETS our Victorian ancestors kept under wraps are finally revealed!
William Gladstone (bottom right), the former Liberal Prime Minister, may have been a man of many parts, but a left forefinger wasn't one of them. He lost it in a shooting accident when he was a young man. But look at any portrait of Gladstone and you'll see he has a full set of ten fingers. Darwin (top right), it turns out, had something to hide: a nasty case of eczema. Pictured (left), a Victorian woman displaying the very tight corset fashion of the day.
LITERARY NEWS
- Adrian Mole author Sue Townsend, 68, dies at her home in Leicester after a stroke
- New chapter in the history of the Bronte birthplace as new owners turn it into a cafe honouring the family's literary heritage
- Nobel laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez, author of One Hundred Years of Solitude, hospitalised with lung and urinary tract infections
- You don't need sex to sell! Dan Brown's Inferno tops Amazon best-seller list for 2013 as readers look for different thrills after Fifty Shades trilogy
Catherine Howard was just 18 when she married Henry VIII who was fat and 50. She soon found a younger lover, which proved a deadly mistake... Sex, lies and losing your head
Believe it or not, Catherine Howard (on the left), Henry VIII's fifth wife, the one beheaded for having a bit on the side, was a victim of Brexit, a piece of collateral damage. Not, I hasten to add, our present situation vis a vis Brussels (though there are parallels) but the original Brexit, the 16th-century version when England raised two fingers to the over-mighty power of a centralised European authority - the Roman Catholic church in the Vatican - and opted to go it alone.