The Galapagos by Henry Nicholls (Profile, £9.99)

Nicholls' history of the Galapagos Islands, made famous by Darwin's On the Origin of Species, isn't just a naturalist's hymn to a place he loves, it's also a careful yet passionate assessment of what the islands still have to offer us, and what warnings they can give us about the state of our ecosystem.

The Lives of Women by Christine Dwyer Hickey (Atlantic, £12.99)

Like John Cheever crossed with The Stepford Wives, Hickey's 1970s-set novel is about young Elaine Nichols, isolated at home with an illness but able to observe the mysteriously changing patterns of her mother's life and those of the other women in their small town as they become more 'aware'. It is a beguiling, yet also disturbing, read.

The Unburied by Charles Palliser (W&N, £8.99)

Palliser really is the master of the neo-Victorian genre, mixing deliciously spooky tales with high intelligence and a superior style, ever since his extraordinary debut, The Quincunx. This latest work deploys all the Gothic armoury: ghosts, creepy houses, ancient manuscripts, with expert ease. His hero, Dr Courtine, doesn't disappoint, either.

Modernity Britain 1957-1962 by David Kynaston (Bloomsbury, £14.99)

What often surprises those of us born in the late 1960s or even early 1970s is how much of this earlier era in Britain still lingered, twenty years on. Kynaston dives right in, showing us how much the social changes that took place during these five years, like the spread of tv, pop music and immigration, took hold, and why.