The Northmen's Fury by Philip Parker (Vintage, £9.99)

Parker argues against the myth of the Vikings as disparate irate groups bent on violence, and for strategic attacks made by a sophisticated people, who were slightly over-populated, as well as keen to increase their trading links. His book is impressively packed full of information, including fun stuff like the fact they didn't wear horned helmets.

Nest by Esther Ehrlich (Rock The Boat, £7.99)

Published by Oneworld's new children's imprint, San Francisco-based Ehrlich's touching story about a young girl, Chirp, whose mother is possibly dying and who finds some escape from her fear of losing her in a friendship with the ghostly Joey, complements her ability to bring the Cape Cod landscape alive for young readers.

Himmler's Cook by Franz-Olivier Giesbert (Atlantic, £12.99)

Giesbert's tale of 105-year-old Rose is about violence and love, against the backdrop of the 20th century's worst atrocities. His elderly heroine is no pushover; she has killed and is prepared to kill again. Often subject to sexual assault during her life, like being forced to attend to Himmler's needs, hers is a distanced, if blackly comedic, voice.

The Dedalus Book Of Slovak Literature, edited by Peter Karpinsky (Dedalus Books, £11.99)

Realism and naturalism dominate the complicated history of Slovak literature, and this collection of 20th-century stories by writers from the 1910s to the present, reflects that. But there are also questions about the novel or the story, a self-reflexiveness we recognise from the age of Modernism, and the themes of family and loss are universal.