Manchester University Press is set to publish Dave Haslam's “intimate” collection of creative interviews 👇 #BookSky
TOMORROW: Immigration, Policy & Protest – an urgent conversation on Britain’s politics of #immigration.
🎙️ Hear from Fizza Qureshi @migrantsrights.bsky.social and @michaelacbenson.bsky.social @aaronwinter.bsky.social @aleksandralewicki.bsky.social
📅 Weds 22 Oct 18.30-20.00 BST
🎟️ buff.ly/DGBy564
Donate here to help keep Dar Al Taqwa, London’s oldest independent bookstore devoted to Islamic literature, open. They’re going to raise 25k.
daraltaqwa.com/pages/don-t-...
More on the store, and how special it is, here.
www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025...
HAPPY NEW YEAR! 🎉
To celebrate the start of a new year, we are currently offering 40% OFF EVERY SINGLE BOOK on our website, until 31st January 2026.
Head to our website (link in bio) to shop now.
#booksky
Huge congratulations to Rogelio Luque-Lora, we are delighted to be the publisher of ‘LAND: A History of Belonging’ and can't wait to share it with readers! #booksky
Catching up on @poltheoryother.bsky.social and reminded of the continued relevance of @aerond.bsky.social analysis of the 'reckless opportunists' in the formation of today's political class (manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/9781526127280/)
Sadiah Qureshi 🦈
Publishing today!
Water 💧
Energy ⚡️
Housing 🏠
Virtually every aspect of our lives are now targeted by someone seeking to make a profit, our basic needs turned into assets. Author Kate Bayliss exposes the harmful consequences of this model in her new book, 'Privatising humanity'. #booksky
Dar Al Taqwa is a London publishing house, specialising in all Islamic literature including Sufism, Seerah, Hadith, Quran Studies, Fiqh and Shariah, Islamic History, Politics, Economics, Social studie...
Lots going on here that I agree with on non-fiction's struggles: Attention economy issues, templated unimaginative books, a very diverse category that doesn't always serve its readers or writers well to be grouped under, but fundamentally a vital human pursuit: www.theguardian.com/books/2025/d...