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Embers of the Hands Shortlisted for the Wolfson History Prize

We are pleased to announce that Eleanor Barraclough’s eye-opening and engaging history of the Viking age Embers of the Hands has been shortlisted for the Wolfson History Prize 2025, recognising the best history non-fiction titles from the past year.

The Prize judges said, ‘Beautifully and dynamically written, this book fuses history and archaeology to offer intimate and compelling insights into the everyday lives and beliefs of ordinary people in the Viking period.’

Many congratulations to Eleanor and the five other shortlisted authors. The Prize will be announced on 2nd December.

Discover more about Embers of the Hands: Hidden Histories of the Viking Age below and read an interview with Eleanor here.


‘Every page glittering with insight… [a] wonderful book’ Dominic Sandbrook
‘Brilliantly written… evokes the wonder of an entire civilisation.’ Tom Holland
‘Takes us beyond the familiar into a real, visceral, far more satisfying Viking world.’ Dan Snow

It’s time to meet the real Vikings. A comb, preserved in a bog, engraved with the earliest traces of a new writing system. A pagan shrine deep beneath a lava field. A note from an angry wife to a husband too long at the tavern. Doodles on birch-bark, made by an imaginative child.

From these tiny embers, Eleanor Barraclough blows back to life the vast, rich and complex world of the Vikings. These are not just the stories of kings, raiders and saga heroes. Here are the lives of ordinary people: the merchants, children, artisans, enslaved people, seers, travellers and storytellers who shaped the medieval Nordic world.

Immerse yourself in the day-to-day lives of an extraordinary culture that spanned centuries and spread from its Scandinavian heartlands to the remote fjords of Greenland, the Arctic wastelands, the waterways and steppes of Eurasia, all the way to the Byzantine Empire and Islamic Caliphate.

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New Alan Bennett Diaries for March 2026

‘I pause on June 2nd at 11am to eat my breakfast in the sitting room where it is – blessedly – served by Rupert on another gorgeous morning, a flawless blue sky not a cloud to be seen.’

 

We are delighted to be publishing Alan Bennett’s Enough Said, his fourth collection of diaries and prose, in partnership with Faber.

Taking up where Keeping On Keeping On left off, Enough Said is Alan Bennett’s fourth collection of diaries and prose.

Covering the turbulent years 2016 to 2024, the diaries take us through lockdown, Brexit, the reign of Johnson, the rise of Trump and the death of the Queen. In between, Alan holidays in Paris and Venice, returns to favourite haunts in England, and visits churches, antique shops and the National Gallery. There is the premiere of Allelujah!, the revived Talking Heads, the publication of two Sunday Times bestsellers and the filming of The Choral.

2024 is the year that Alan turns ninety; he reflects on old age and the importance of luck. He looks back to childhood and recalls an idyllic wartime month as an evacuee. There is an extended piece about HMQ, and on uncovering an extraordinary albums of publisher Roger Senhouse, the last lover of Lytton Strachey, acquired for £10 in the 70s.

A book for the bedside, this is poignant, funny, contemplative Alan Bennett, as he records life both personal and political in his most distinct of voices.

Pre-order Enough Said


 

Presided over by the lofty Mrs McBryde, Hill Topp House is a superior council home for the elderly.

Among the unforgettable cast of staff and residents there’s Mr Peckover the deluded archaeologist, Phyllis the knitter, Mr Cresswell the ex-cruise ship hairdresser, the enterprising Mrs Foss and Mr Jimson the chiropodist. Covid is the cause of fatalities and the source of darkly comic confusion, but it’s also the key to liberation.

As staff are hospitalised, protocol breaks down. Miss Rathbone reveals a lifelong secret, and the surviving residents seize their moment, arthritis allowing, to scamper freely in the warmth of the summer sun.

A wonderful surprise gift from Alan Bennett and the perfect way to kill time before his brilliant new collection next year, Killing Time is out in paperback next Thursday.

Pre-order Killing Time in paperback

Alan Bennett’s works for stage and screen include Talking Heads, Forty Years On, The Lady in the Van, A Question of Attribution, The Madness of George III, an adaptation of The Wind in the Willows, The History Boys, The Habit of Art, People, Hymn, Cocktail Sticks, Two Besides and Allelujah!

Prose collections are Writing Home, Untold Stories (PEN/Ackerley Prize, 2006) and Keeping On Keeping On. Other work includes The Uncommon Reader, Smut: Two Unseemly Stories and recent Sunday Times bestsellers, House Arrest and Killing Time.

 

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Announcing the 2025 Ideas Prize shortlist

The Profile Books and Alexander Aitken Ideas Prize is pleased to announce its shortlist for the best debut trade non-fiction proposal from an academic. The Ideas Prize was first launched in 2019, and offers a £25,000 book contract with Profile Books, as well as representation with Aitken Alexander Associates, to the winning book proposal.

The shortlisted authors will be receiving guidance from an agent at Aitken Alexander on the next steps of their proposals, after which the winner will be determined via a judging panel. Many congratulations to our shortlisted authors for their wonderful projects, which are as follows:

Nicholas Radburn for Firearm Frontier
Lancaster University

Firearm Frontier explores the interconnection between the firearm and slave trades in world history. Following the British arms and ammunition trade across the globe, from warriors in the tropical forests of West Africa and Native Americans in the frozen tundra of Canada, to Maori warriors storming hill forts in precolonial New Zealand and East African marksmen stalking the savannah, Radburn will explore the devastating effects of the arrivals of these weapons. Firearm Frontier offer new perspectives on an age of slavery more violent and deadly than anything the world had ever seen, charting how gunpowder technology remade environments, cultures, politics, and societies.

Megan Gooch for Crash
University of Oxford

When a new coin type is created it is called a recoinage. We’ve had one recently with the coins of King Charles III entering circulation and replacing those of Queen Elizabeth II. Not all recoinages are a sign of an economic crisis, such as the accession of a new monarch, but historically, all financial crises created a recoinage. Crash is an adventure through numismatics – the study of coins – bringing together the disastrous histories of medieval kings, Tudor queens, civil wars, Viking invaders, and the coin that broke the French economy and led to the creation of the Franc, among many others.

Alexis Wick for Before 1498
Koç University

Drawing on years of study and research, Alexis Wick brings to life the story and legacy of Ahmad Ibn Majid, known to his peers as the ‘Lion of the Seas’, legendary master navigator of the Indian Ocean, on the eve of the arrival of the first Portuguese ships – and following them, European colonialism. In this evocative, fascinating maritime adventure, Before 1498 uncovers the untold story of Ibn Majid’s life and work, shedding precious light on long-neglected non-European traditions of learning and practices of navigation.

Congratulations to those who have been shortlisted, and many thanks to all who entered. The submissions window will open for the 2026 prize later this year when we announce the winner of the 2025 edition.