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1A Thousand Threads, Neneh Cherry
Neneh CherryCherry remains one of the 1990's most iconic faces. A Thousand Threads now cements the music star as a consummate storyteller. Her poignant and incisive memoir was lauded by the judges as a true tour de force. Charting her life from her childhood in rural Sweden to her heyday as a global superstar, it offers juicy insider nuggets of that era while remaining solidly an immensely personal story about navigating fame and family.
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2Agent Zo, Clare Mulley
Clare MulleyA riveting account of one of World War II's secret heroines: the Polish resistance fighter Elżbieta Zawacka. She was the only woman to reach London from the Polish Home Army Command, was trained by the British SOE and dropped behind enemy lines, eventually becoming the only woman in the elite Polish special forces. Post-war, Zawacka was imprisoned by the communist regime and her story forgotten. Mulley's fascinating book aims to bring her extraordinary life back to global attention.
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3Private Revolutions, Yuan Yang
BloomsburyA powerful book about the realities of living in modern-day China, told through the lives of four ordinary women, each with different yet analogous struggles to thrive in an unequal society, all of whom grew up after the events of Tiananmen Square. Yang's gripping work is a true feat of storytelling, praised by judge Kavita Puri for chronicling "coming of age stories you rarely hear of".
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4Raising Hare, Chloe Dalton
Chloe DaltonA charming and unusual book about what happened when lockdown forced Dalton – a busy London professional – to move back to the countryside. There, she found a young abandoned baby hare and her experience raising it would prove to be life-changing. Judge Elizabeth Buchan called the work a "beautiful meditation on the interactions between the human and the natural world".
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5The Story of a Heart, Rachel Clarke
Rachel ClarkeAn immensely moving account of how one family's tragedy – the deterioration of a nine-year-old girl after a catastrophic car accident – became the saving of another, when her young heart was donated to Max, a little boy dying from a crippling virus in desperate need of a transplant. Clarke's journey to writing this book is almost as extraordinary as the story itself: she became a palliative care doctor after years as a documentarian, focusing on subjects such as the Iraq War. The Story of a Heart is her third work of non-fiction.
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6What the Wild Sea Can be, Helen Scales
Helen ScalesA galvanising call to protect our oceans, written with a lyrical and evocative prose that draws on the rich and fascinating history of our seas. The marine biologist and author Helen Scales astutely balances her knowledge and narrative prowess to offer advice and innovation for protecting our seas and coastlines, making this both a riveting and urgent read.
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