GameCentral gets a first look at this year’s Call Of Duty, which boasts a new Korean setting, DMZ, and some notable changes to multiplayer.
After last year’s Call Of Duty: Black Ops 7 fell short both critically and commercially, against Battlefield 6, Activision’s juggernaut shooter has never looked more vulnerable. EA might not have another Battlefield planned for this year, but there’s a prevailing sense that a once unshakeable franchise has been knocked onto the backfoot.
This is where Call Of Duty’s next entry awkwardly and – because of the yearly development cycles – unintentionally sits. Activision has now revealed it is, as the leaks already suggested, a sequel to 2023’s Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 3. A follow-up to one of the worst received entries in series history is an unfortunate choice for a franchise which is coming off such a notable blow, but Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 is insisting it will shake things up for the better.
In terms of the campaign, the most promising change is the Korean setting. The story hinges around a war between North and South Korea, which threatens to destabilise the entire world. In the preview, Activision provided a rundown of every level in the campaign, and you’re oscillating between two factions: a blended squad of Korean and US soldiers you follow in missions set in Korea; and the globe-trotting escapades of franchise regular Captain Price, who is dealing with the wider conflict and going rogue across Paris, Mumbai, New York, and other locales.
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Because of the country’s mandatory military service, the Korean soldiers you play as aren’t trained military experts but regular people who are naïve to the dangers ahead of them – which is something Call Of Duty hasn’t really explored since it drifted away from the Second World War and leaned into superhero-like machismo.
We’ll have to wait to see how the full game shakes out, but we were disappointed that the exploits of the Korean squad wasn’t the entire focus of the campaign. Instead they share headline billing with Captain Price, who, while a notable character for those invested in Call Of Duty lore (and the connective tissue to Modern Warfare 3), is a far less interesting prospect in comparison.
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On the multiplayer side, there are changes too – although the majority of them might only register with hardcore players. Developer Infinity Ward is promising more fluidity than ever, thanks to slicker transitions between sliding, mantling, and climbing. The omni-movement of recent titles has been expanded as well, allowing you to shoot while hanging off ledges, shimmy around corners, and launch into a super slide directly onto your back via a quick double tap.
Additionally, Infinity Ward is emphasising realism and precision through what it calls ‘Ballistic Authority’. This is a catch-all term to encompass improved gun animations, enhanced player visibility and, perhaps most importantly for a select few, the removal of weapon bloom; where, when firing from the hip, shots would randomly veer away from the centre of the crosshair to incentivise down the sights aiming. Now, the small element of inaccurate randomness has been removed – a move which, while sound in theory, could make aiming down the sights far less useful.
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There’s a car chase in Paris (Activision)
Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 might be gunning for the competitive hardcore crowd with these alterations, but there are some welcome improvements to streamline parts of the experience too. There’s a new ‘Gunny’ system in the Gunsmith which allows you to quickly assemble gun builds based on pre-selected criteria, while there’s greater flexibility in applying different loadouts to different operators.
Infinity Ward is promising over 12 multiplayer modes at launch, including three new ones titled Inflation, Hijack, and Counter Attack, and 12 brand new multiplayer maps. The most interesting of these is Killblock, which appears to be some kind of procedurally generated map split across different environmental slabs, which are randomly assembled into over 500 combinations each time you jump in.
The third pillar to Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 is DMZ, an extraction mode which returns following its beta iteration in 2022’s Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 2. The franchise has been experimenting with extraction modes for some time, as seen in last year’s Endgame mode in Black Ops 7, but we’ll have to wait and see how different this will be.
Perhaps most notably beyond the game itself, Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 will be the first game in the series to arrive on the Nintendo Switch 2, and simultaneously with the PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC versions on October 23, 2026.
We didn’t see any footage from the Switch 2 version, so it remains to be seen if it will retain Call Of Duty’s all-important 60fps frame rate, but no doubt compromises will need to be made somewhere.
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Overall, Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 doesn’t appear to be a drastic reinvention, but it feels like it’s trying something slightly different at least, which is perhaps the best you can ask for when a series is stuck in a yearly development rotation and Activision won’t be able to properly respond to recent criticism for a few years yet.
The multiplayer is emphasising fluid movement (Activision)
The Woodland Trust organised a Two Lads themed community walk for people to learn about the landmark’s history, the folklore and the theories of how the cairns came to be.
With walkers learning about the past, present and future of the monument, while taking in spectacular views.
The event sold out, but say the Woodland Trust it will be back.
A spokesman said: “The event sold out overnight, but we’ll be hosting more Two Lads events throughout the summer. Keep an eye on our Eventbrite and social media so you can grab a spot on the next one.”
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Two Lads. Picture Gillian McGowan
The walk is funded by The National Lottery Heritage Fund.
Two Lads Cairns is situated on Crooked Edge Hill, next to the historic Winter Hill, a popular destination for walkers in and around Lancashire.
The Woodland Trust is planning to restore Two Lads securely to deter vandalism and make the monument safer for visitors.
The trust states that it understands the local significance and the important memories people hold of the site.
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And the plan is to preserve the cairn’s history for as long as possible.
Jannik Sinner says he “could not find any energy” as he lost in the second round to Juan Manuel Cerundolo in one of the biggest French Open shocks in recent years – but the world number one did not believe the Paris heat was to blame.
Italy’s Sinner was the heavy favourite for the title, having dominated the men’s tour in recent months, and was on a 30-match winning streak going into Thursday’s match.
After dropping just eight games in his Roland Garros opener against Clement Tabur, Sinner was in similarly commanding form against Cerundolo, leading 6-3 6-2 5-1 before suffering a dramatic physical downturn.
The Italian laboured around the court and lost three successive games before calling for the trainer, saying he felt “dizzy” and “wanted to vomit”.
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He took a mid-game medical timeout and left the court at the end of the third and fourth sets, but could not regain his fitness as he fell to world number 56 Cerundolo.
Although several players have attributed their on-court struggles to the unseasonably hot conditions in Paris, with temperatures peaking around 34C, Sinner downplayed the impact.
“I had no energy today. That can happen. Nobody is a robot,” Sinner said.
“I woke up this morning, didn’t feel very well and tried to keep points very short.
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“In the beginning I was hitting very clean, very good, and then I just hit a wall.
“I started feeling dizzy. Very low on energy. I tried to serve it out but I didn’t have a lot of energy.”
Although he has previously struggled in extreme heat, most notably in his third-round win over Eliot Spizzirri at this year’s Australian Open, Sinner said this was “a completely different scenario”.
“It was warm, but not crazy warm. I feel like it was quite OK to play,” the 24-year-old said.
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“It was nothing against the heat, nothing against the weather. It was just me today, but it happens.”
ITV Love Island star Lorenzo Alessi opened up about his life and relationship history ahead of stepping into the villa
Samantha King Content Editor
20:15, 28 May 2026
The 2026 Love Island line-up is here, including a Hertfordshire star who has his sights on Maya Jama.
Lorenzo Alessi is amongst the six boys confirmed for the starting line-up of the popular reality dating programme’s forthcoming series. The 28-year-old fashion business owner was approached to take part in the show back in January, bringing an abrupt end to his plan of having “a sensible year.”
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“I always want to say yes to things and the opportunity came my way and I thought what a crazy summer it would be so I took the bull by the horns and here I am,” the Hertfordshire native told Cambridgeshire Live before entering the villa for the first time.
“I’ve never experienced love,” he confessed, “So I thought ‘What a crazy place to see if love could blossom’. I wanted to go in and have a crazy adventure and see where it can lead to.”
Launching on June 1 at 9pm on ITV2, the forthcoming series promises “unforgettable moments, unmissable messiness, and plenty of romance,” all taking place under the watchful gaze of returning presenter Maya, whom Lorenzo disclosed he already had his sights set on, reports OK!
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“Yeah, definitely,” he enthused when questioned whether he would be flirting with the ITV star, before seeking confirmation she was actually single. He continued: “Was she not dating the footballer? I’ll ask her.”
Lorenzo’s extensive checklist for a potential partner includes not sharing the same background, being a ‘posh girl’ and possessing good manners. However, his ultimate attraction is a “skinny arm”, something even he concedes is a “really strange” feature to focus on.
“I love a skinny arm. I don’t know what it is, I just, I’ve always been attracted to a nice slender arm,” he confessed. “It’s just something that the mind goes to, don’t ask me why.”
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The aspiring reality star’s forthcoming appearance will mark his first venture into television, and he remains uncertain whether his unconventional strategy for attracting women will succeed in the villa – though he’s willing to give it a go.
“I’m not saying that I’m a wizard when it comes to mind games, but I think we all want what we can’t have so by putting yourself in that category it can sometimes make yourself more valuable in a girl’s eyes,” he shared.
Providing an illustration of his risky reverse psychology tactic, he recalled telling a girl: “‘You should go and talk to him, he seems more your type’ all that sort of stuff. I think in the past that has worked in my favour.”
Love Island’s new summer series begins on June 1 at 9pm on ITV2 and ITVX.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Justice has opened an investigation into whether E. Jean Carroll, the longtime advice columnist who has said Donald Trump sexually assaulted her in a New York department store 30 years ago, lied during the course of civil litigation against him, according to a person familiar with the matter.
The person who confirmed the existence of the investigation was not authorized to publicly discuss an ongoing inquiry and spoke on the condition of anonymity. The perjury investigation is being led by the federal prosecutors’ office in Chicago, and acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has had no involvement because of his prior work as Trump’s personal attorney, the person said.
Lawyers for Carroll did not immediately respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press on Thursday.
It’s the latest in a series of investigations that Trump’s Justice Department has opened into perceived adversaries of the Republican president. The actions, including securing an indictment last month against former FBI Director James Comey, have raised alarm from Democrats and former officials that an institution meant to make prosecutorial decisions independent of the White House is being weaponized.
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Carroll has said a flirtatious, chance encounter with Trump in 1996 at Bergdorf Goodman’s Fifth Avenue store in Manhattan ended violently. She said Trump slammed her against a dressing room wall, pulled down her tights and forced himself on her. Trump has called the allegations a “made-up scam,” and he has attacked her motivations, saying they were politically driven or arose from a desire to promote her memoir.
A jury in 2023 found Trump liable for sexually abusing Carroll and defaming her, and she was awarded $5 million. The following year, another jury awarded Carroll $83.3 million in a defamation case related to Trump’s social media posts about her.
The Justice Department is scrutinizing a statement Carroll made in the course of the civil litigation that no one else was paying her legal fees. It later became public that a Chicago-based organization backed by Reid Hoffman, the co-founder of LinkedIn, had helped fund Carroll’s case. Trump’s lawyers in the civil case accused Carroll of concealing that information, which they said called into question whether the case was politically motivated.
A month before the first trial in 2023, then-Trump lawyer Alina Habba sought to delay it, saying in court papers that new revelations about Hoffman partially funding Carroll’s case “raises significant questions as to Plaintiff’s credibility, as well as her motive for commencing and/or continuing the instant action.”
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The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in a Dec. 30, 2024, ruling, upheld the $5 million jury award from 2023. The court addressed Carroll’s credibility after Trump accused her of lying, during a deposition, about how her case was funded.
The court cited Carroll’s explanation that when the question about Hoffman’s contributions was first posed to her in 2022, she had forgotten about “the limited outside funding” received in September 2020.
“It showed that Ms. Carroll simply was not involved in the matter of who was or was not funding her litigation costs,” the appeals court said.
Hoffman has defended the financial assistance, saying in a social media post that “supporting women fight for progress and justice in philanthropy, politics and business has been a longstanding priority of mine, as is supporting America against the threat of Trump.”
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A court entry earlier this month said Trump will not have to pay the award until the U.S. Supreme Court gets a chance to review the case or reject an appeal. The appeals court agreed to a request by one of Trump’s lawyers that it let Trump delay the payment to Carroll, though he was required to post a $7.4 million bond to cover any additional interest costs, a request Carroll’s attorney had made.
The Carroll investigation was first reported by CNN.
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Associated Press reporter Larry Neumeister in New York contributed to this report
An application to licence Hima Fuji, in Lawrence Street, for live music until 2am daily was approved following a City of York Council hearing on Thursday, May 28.
Ze He, the restaurant’s owner, told councillors the licence was only intended to regularise hosting karaoke which takes place in booths which are professionally sound-proofed.
But neighbouring resident Richard Bowen said he feared the licence could open the door to live acts performing at the venue which is close to homes and several elderly people.
Councillors approved the application but added a condition which only allows live music in the restaurant’s five karaoke booths at the back of the building.
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Asian restaurant Hima Fuji’s applied to allow live music during its existing opening hours of 9am to 2am daily and until 3am on bank holidays and New Year’s Eve.
The premises has been licensed since 2018 and was previously home to Mojo’s Chinese Cuisine which has since shut down.
Hima Fuji’s application stated the application had been lodged after a change in the venue’s layout.
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Thursday’s licensing meeting heard the application came after council enforcement officers making a routine visit found works had already been done.
It also heard there had been one complaint about noise at the premises in 2023.
No objections against the application were made by official consultees or responsible authorities such as North Yorkshire Police or the council’s licensing team.
Hima Fuji, in Lawrence Street, York (Image: LDRS)
But three objections from people living in Farrar Street and others nearby were lodged, with one branding the application completely insensitive.
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They claimed it could see them disturbed by loud music and people leaving the venue in the early hours and fuel antisocial behaviour and parking problems.
Resident Mr Bowen said he was fearful of what he termed licensing creep which could one day result in the premises becoming a fully-fledged music venue if it changes hands.
He said: “The karaoke is perfectly fine, but what concerns me is what this could lead to, a live music licence will make that venue a much more desirable prospect to the type of people who will run that sort of thing.
“One day is is a family-friendly karaoke bar, then one night there’s a band on and lots of students come in and spend a lot of money and then it becomes every night.
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“You’ll also have people standing outside smoking and standing, chatting and making a noise up to 2am, there’s elderly people living nearby including one who’s 104.
“Once you open that Pandora’s Box you’re going to have a lot of trouble putting the bands back in and I don’t want to live next to a Fibbers for the next 10 years.”
Fibbers was a well-known live music venue in York which closed during the coronavirus pandemic.
The restaurant’s owner said he understood the concerns of neighbours and he would ensure staff were trained to properly deal with noise.
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He added the complaint in 2023 happened when he was away from the premises.
The applicant said: “We’ve been running karaoke for the last four years and we’ve only had that one issue, since then we’ve never had any complaints.
“This is only connected to karaoke, that’s what this application’s for, we wouldn’t want a live band on next to people who are eating.
“All the karaoke rooms are sound-proofed and insulated, even if you’re playing loud music inside one if you’re stood in the corridor outside you can barely hear it.
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“The majority of our customers are Chinese students who don’t drive, they walk or take taxis here.”
Emma Barnett, from in Essex, was found guilty of murdering her 14-month-old son Oakley
Matt Jackson Live News Network Reporter
19:11, 28 May 2026Updated 19:18, 28 May 2026
A woman has been convicted of murder after administering a lethal combination of prescription drugs to her infant son, having been discovered clutching him in a loft. Emma Barnett and her son Oakley were initially reported missing following a family court hearing on 8 November 2024, at which it had been ruled that her 14-month-old son was to be taken into care.
Officers had believed that Barnett, of Chester Road, Debden in Essex, had taken Oakley to the nearby Epping Forest. Judge Mr Justice Derek Sweeting, told jurors at Cambridge Crown Court, that the 36-year-old had parked her vehicle at Epping Forest before walking back to her home.
As negotiations continued, officers grew increasingly alarmed for the child’s welfare. They forced their way into the loft space, and both Barnett and Oakley were subsequently taken to hospital for treatment.
Tragically, despite the efforts of medical staff, Oakley died in December 2024. Barnett received hospital treatment before being arrested on suspicion of murder in January 2025.
The judge noted that Barnett had later stated in interview that she “wanted the police to think I was in the forest so I could stay indoors with Oakley”.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) confirmed that evidence presented during the trial revealed Barnett had prepared a bottle containing a mixture of milk and medication, which she administered to Oakley, ultimately causing his death. The CPS confirmed Barnett was convicted of murder following her trial.
Officers had communicated with Barnett by telephone and through the loft hatch. Initially, she informed them that Oakley was asleep, before declaring “I have killed him”, according to the CPS.
Police say they carried out a “detailed investigation” which included interviewing Barnett in June 2025. She declined to respond to any questions, police say, but was subsequently charged with one count of murder.
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During an 18-day trial at Cambridge Crown Court, jurors heard that Barnett had been scheduled to attend a legal hearing to determine Oakley’s future. The toddler had been placed under an interim care order on the day they disappeared.
Barnett initially pleaded not guilty to murdering the child. However, after six hours of deliberation, the jury returned a guilty verdict.
Summarising the evidence for jurors earlier this week, the judge stated that Oakley was admitted to hospital and died on New Year’s Eve 2024. He explained the prosecution’s position was that Barnett “intentionally administered to him (Oakley) medication prescribed to her intending to kill him and this was the planned outcome”.
Judge Sweeting noted that the defence case was that Oakley’s death was accidental. Outlining the defendant’s position to jurors, the judge continued that her case was that “she didn’t intentionally administer medication or intend serious harm or to kill him”. “Her intention was to take her own life but only at the point Oakley would be removed from her by police,” the judge said, summing up Barnett’s defence case.
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Barnett claimed that concealing herself in the loft “was to extend the time she had left with Oakley”, the judge stated. He explained that investigators discovered two baby bottles in the loft containing liquids that tested positive for the antihistamine promethazine, which can induce sedation, and the antidepressant mirtazapine. The judge noted that expert testimony indicated “taken together their effects may be greater than either alone” and they could cause “respiratory compromise”.
Nicola Pope, senior Crown prosecutor, said: “Emma Barnett deliberately gave her baby son a dangerous mixture containing medication which proved fatal. Our prosecution case relied on a detailed and careful analysis of the evidence from the police investigation, including expert medical evidence, to establish how Oakley came to die.
“I hope that today’s outcome provides some measure of peace to Oakley’s family and loved ones during this deeply upsetting time.”
Detective Inspector James Holmes of Essex Police said: “This was an extremely upsetting and difficult investigation for everybody involved. Our thoughts remain with Oakley and everyone who loved him.”
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Barnett is due to be sentenced at Cambridge Crown Court on 5 June.
I really do mean to read the books I take on holiday. But if I ever get accused of “performative” non-reading, I won’t have a good defence: I usually read half a page, get annoyed by the sun’s glare, and put it back down.
And that’s when I can be bothered to bring my reading material with me to begin with. Bigger, bulkier books won’t realistically take priority in that jam-packed beach bag, and it’s not like my sun-addled brain is really craving massive tomes.
In fact, I think knowing I won’t finish the story before I’m back in the airport puts me off a bit. So, we thought we’d round up eight short, small books under 250 pages you might actually finish on holiday (with two bonuses):
1) The Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennett
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Described as an “audacious lèse majesté” by The Guardian, this one-sitting book imagines a Queen who reads voraciously, asks her subjects “what are you reading?” instead of “how did you get here?” (a move hilariously accused of being “elitist”), and has plenty of thoughts on Proust. It’s zippy and deeply funny.
Read: Anywhere. It’s so addictive, you could stay hooked on a plane
*All page lengths are taken from GoodReads. Your copy may differ
2) Our Wives Under The Sea by Julia Armfield
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When Miri’s wife, Leah, returns from a deep-sea mission, the pair hope everything’s back to normal. But there’s been a “reusfacing glitch”, which this horror-realist, Polari-Prize-winning book explores in ways my colleague called “amazing/heartbreaking”. It’s also been described by the LA Review of Books as an “elliptical, leaky manual on how to live in the half-known life”.
Read: Wherever you can cry in peace, and maybe not right after dinner
3) Before The Coffee Gets Cold by Toshikazu Kawaguchi
In a Toyko café, a special offer is on the menu: you can order time travel alongside your latte. This book tracks four people who want to take advantage of the deal for various reasons, but find it comes with consequential caveats.
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Read: In a scenic café, if you want to be on the nose about it
4) My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite
Sibling rivalry, men, and murder feature heavily in this darkly hilarious novel. Korede’s sister, Ayoola, puts a gory twist on the term “cleaning up someone else’s mess”, but even her patience is tried when her sibling aims a little too close to home.
Read: When your sibling holiday no longer feels like a charming bonding exercise
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5) The Lost Daughter by Elena Ferrante
Yes, that is the same story that was adapted into an Olivia Colman-fronted Netflix hit. Middle-aged divorcee Leda is alone on holiday, not having to take care of anyone for the first time in years. But when obsession over another, younger couple and a lost doll come into play, what should have been a period of self-rediscovery becomes what the New Yorker called a “brutally frank novel of maternal ambivalence”.
Read: On a solo holiday, or when you’ve been fantasising about one
6) The Moorland Cottage by Elizabeth Gaskell
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I’ve written before about why Austen and Brontë fans should give this Victorian author a read, but this short novel proves she’s a great pick for George Eliot fans too. A 1991 paper pointed out that Gaskell’s “little-known” book has been suggested as the “genesis” for the Middlemarch authors’ The Mill On The Floss since 1877. Certainly, the stunning descriptions of rural life, the headstrong female protagonist, and the tension between her ambition and the constraints of Victorian England would make any Eliot fan (including this one) very happy.
Read: On a staycation somewhere in the countryside, and/or, with due respect, when you want the feel of Eliot without a PhD-level reference list
7) I’m A Fan by Sheena Patel
The Guardian said that many women might think they recognise the toxic, abusive man the main character deals with in this story, but added that this is only true because “the power of I’m a Fan comes from describing a classic (if poisonous) archetype that can be traced back to the beginning of time”. You’ll gasp, grimace, and groan your way through this pacy debut.
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Read: When you’re on an “I urgently need to get back to me” holiday
8) Hunchback by Saou Ichikawa
Protagonist Shaka Isawa was born with a muscle disorder that means she lives a rich life online; her sex life very much included. When one of her carers finds out about her steamier submissions, power, money, and intimacy change become subverted in deliciously complicated ways.
Read: When you want your reading list to be the most memorable part of your holiday
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Shout-outs
The Rachel Incident by Caroline O’Donaghue
Though it’s a little long at 304 pages, a colleague said they tore through The Rachel Incident by Caroline O’Donaghue on a recent holiday. It’s about friendship, romance, and an ever-changing home.
Read: When you want to say “I’ve read that!” when the upcoming Channel 4 series is released
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Stories Of Your Life And Others by Ted Chiang
This is technically a collection of short stories, but among them is Story Of Your Life, which the movie Arrival is based on. You might find yourself caught up in the author’s impressive other works, which often focus on faintly ridiculous and always engaging “what if…?” plots, too.
Read: Dip in when you want the joy of reading without the commitment of a novel
“Labour cuts have left the Council with an £85 million funding gap. We will stand up for our borough. This Council will now be accountable to Southwark residents, not to Keir Starmer. Together, our two parties can transform this council into one that genuinely listens, and where our diverse communities can shape decisions about where we live.”
More than ten pizzerias have opened in the capital so far this year — high profile, or at least well trodden into London’s frenetic food-based discourse. Probably you’ll have seen Dough Hands, Napoli on the Road, Hot Saint, Pizza Nerds, Short Road, Weezie’s, Fresh Hot, Track’s, Connie’s, All Kaps… the list goes on and more are coming (like Carmy’s slice shop in Covent Garden, due this summer). Some are Neapolitan or Roman but most are New York-inspired or at least East Coast in style. Such as Bar Etna, the most hyped of the lot, which opened earlier in May and comes from the lads behind The Plimsoll, a pub best known for its burger.
Traffic is being held on the M6 northbound between junction 26 for Orrell and junction 27 for Appley Bridge following a collision this afternoon. National Highways North West says emergency services are currently at the scene. Drivers are facing delays of up to 60 minutes with around four miles of congestion building on approach. Motorists are being advised to plan ahead and allow extra time for journeys. Follow our live blog below for the latest traffic updates, congestion information and diversion details.
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