The White Desert
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The best recent translated fiction – review roundup
Sisters in Yellow by Mieko Kawakami; All Flesh by Ananda Devi; The White Desert by Luis López Carrasco; The Home of the Drowned by Elin Anna LabbaSisters in Yellow by Mieko Kawakami, translated by Laurel Taylor and Hitomi Yoshio (Picador, £16.99) Kawakami’s latest opens with a bang, as narrator Hana learns that her old friend Kimiko has been charged with abduction. This MacGuffin takes us to their friendship in late-1990s Tokyo, when teen Hana and the older woman open a bar called Lemon:...
Rare-Earth Developer Aclara Seeks US Backing for Chilean Project
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Does UK’s new far-right party, Restore, pose a threat to Farage’s Reform?
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Turkmenistan's 'heavenly' Akhal-Teke horses celebrated in annual beauty pageants
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After making headlines at 15, Mohamed Semra is now making history
History-making mayor of Maribyrnong, Mohamed Semra, is only getting started Sun 31 May 2026 at 6:06am Sometimes, when the online abuse for being a young, African-born, Muslim mayor gets brutal, Mohamed Semra turns to the lesson he learnt on the back of a donkey in Sudan. He was just 10, a city kid from Melbourne on his first trip back to the country his mother fled with her six children when Mohamed was three. His family needed water, so his uncle propped up Mohamed on a donkey loaded with...
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Dogs follow the direction of a person’s gaze almost as well as another person can—better, in fact, when they are motivated to, because dogs are relentless. They track the movements of our eyeballs to see what we’re looking at so that they can look at it too, and they pester us to look just as attentively at them. When my late golden retriever had something to show me—a ball that had rolled under a fence, a man with an irregular gait—he didn’t always bark.