ALSO ON THE BOOKSHELF
WORDS BY REBECCA FRANKS
GLOBAL
Berlin by Sinclair McKay
(Viking, 464 pages, £20)
City scenes
It’s not possible to understand the 20th century without understanding Berlin. That’s the contention of Sinclair McKay, whose biography of the German capital grapples with its complex and traumatic history. As with his bestseller Dresden, McKay uses previously unseen, first-person accounts from the city’s inhabitants to build up a vivid picture, from the First World War’s end to the fall of the Berlin Wall.
FICTION
Horse by Geraldine Brooks
(Little Brown, 416 pages, £18.99)
American triptych
Based on the true story of Lexington, a brilliant thoroughbred and stud sire, Horse is the latest novel from Pulitzer Prize-winning author Geraldine Brooks. Weaving together three tales from American history – those of an enslaved groom in Kentucky, 1850; a gallery owner in New York City, 1954; and a scientist and art historian in Washington, DC, 2019 – Brooks reckons with the country’s legacy of racism.