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Hot picks

Fill those endless days with the best in sight and sound, thanks to our sunny selection.

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Photographer
Editor

Alfresco movie nights

1.
Freiluftkino Hasenheide
Berlin


2.
NeueHouse Hollywood
Los Angeles


3.
Cinema Lliure
Barcelona


4.
Filmstreet
Belgrade


5.
Cine Society
Lisbon


Films for summer evenings


6.
Aquarela
Dir: Victor Kossakovsky

The protagonist of this film, directed by Russian auteur Victor Kossakovsky, is water in all of its temperamental permutations, from life-giving force to vengeful agent of destruction. Shot in high-definition slow motion with a thundering score, this mesmerising documentary is an immersive dive into the terrifying majesty of Earth’s most precious element.
Released in the UK on 16 August


7.
The Dead Don’t Die
Dir: Jim Jarmusch

Silver-haired director Jim Jarmusch returns with this peculiar (and hilarious) mix of mumblecore-cum-zombie movie. Bill Murray and Adam Driver play two underprepared policemen battling to save a small town overrun by the undead. Wonderfully dry one-liners are served up by a starry supporting cast that includes Danny Glover, Chloë Sevigny, Tilda Swinton, Iggy Pop and Tom Waits.
Released in the UK on 12 July


8.
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Dir: Quentin Tarantino

Of all the film-makers working today perhaps none is better suited to adapting Charles Manson’s reign of terror than Quentin Tarantino. The killing spree that ended the Old Hollywood era in 1969 is brought to chilling life, with Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt leading an impressive cast.
Released in the UK on 15 August


9.
Non-fiction
Dir: Olivier Assayas

Olivier Assayas and Juliette Binoche reunite following 2014 drama Clouds of Sils Maria. This delightful comedy is a witty observation of Paris’s cultural elite, which sees Binoche playing an actor who cheats on her literary-agent husband with a writer whose work the latter refuses to publish.
Released in the UK on 19 July


10.
Pain and Glory
Dir: Pedro Almodóvar

There are murmurs this could be Pedro Almodovar’s swansong. Those familiar with the director will spot familiar tropes (including muses Antonio Banderas and Penelope Cruz) and self-references. Banderas plays a forlorn film-maker questioning the influence of time on memory and the self. In trying to reconcile past with present, he revisits relationships, love, loss, sexuality and addiction.
Released in the UK on 23 August


11.
The Farewell
Dir: Lulu Wang

Awkwafina stars as the American granddaughter of a Chinese woman diagnosed with a terminal illness. The family decides to keep the news a secret from the ageing matriarch and instead plans an elaborate wedding. Writer and director Lulu Wang delicately balances humour and heartstrings.
Released in the US on 12 July


12.
Diego Maradona
Dir: Asif Kapadia

After making documentaries on Ayrton Senna and Amy Winehouse, Asif Kapadia looks at another complicated genius: footballer Diego Maradona. The director draws sharp focus on the mercurial Argentine’s mad, bad and dangerous-to-know mid-1980s period playing for Napoli. Telling the story of the benign “Diego”, providing for his poor family since he was a teenager, versus the naughty, haughty “Maradona”, Kapadia’s film is both parable and a nose-dive into notoriety.
Released in the UK on 14 June


13.
Transit
Dir: Christian Petzold

Despite being based on an Anna Seghers novel from 1944, this tense, Kafkaesque thriller unfolds in modern-day Marseille, where protagonist Georg assumes the identity of a deceased writer in order to escape the country’s ruling fascist regime.
Released in the UK on 3 August


14.
Midsommar
Dir: Ari Aster

Writer/director Ari Aster refreshed the horror genre with his first feature Hereditary. Now he applies his mastery to the haunting story of a couple visiting rural Sweden, where an idyllic festival is not what it seems. Pagan cults and eerie twists bring to mind classics Rosemary’s Baby and The Wicker Man.
Released in the UK on 5 July


15.
JT Leroy
Dir: Justin Kelly

Author JT Leroy caused a stir with a series of apparently autobiographical books that recounted a teenage boy’s messy childhood. The stir became a scandal in 2005 when the persona was exposed as an elaborate hoax. Kristen Stewart shines in this clever critique of celebrity culture.
Released in the UK on 12 August


Acts to have on repeat


16.
Jordan Rakei
Origin

“My first album is about meditation and self-discovery, the second one is about my childhood. I thought, ‘What can I write about now?’” Answer: the effect of technology on mankind. It may not be what you expect from a summer record but, as Jordan Rakei sings on the opening track of new LP Origin, “It’s a mad world.”

Since moving to London in 2015, Rakei’s career has been on the rise. The New Zealand-born, Brisbane-raised musician has written with legendary producer Nile Rodgers, performed with electronica superstar Bonobo and appeared on fellow Londoner Loyle Carner’s recent critically acclaimed album.

It’s an experience that helped Rakei develop from his earlier introspective albums to something with a wider view. “It could be partly maturing and realising there’s more to think about than just yourself,” he says of the songwriting shift.

Worry not though, as Rakei’s dystopian subject is unpacked via lush, upbeat and layered arrangements. “I wanted the music to sound bright, colourful and vibrant,” he says. His capacity to marry classic song structures with contemporary jazz textures (and a touch of neo-soul) makes for a pleasing listen.

If debut Cloak was a man trying to work out his sound and Wallflower was a lesson in mastering the art of songwriting, Origin finds Rakei confident in his musical chops and what he wants to say.

Rakei’s summer tracks:
1. Anderson Paak (featuring Andre 3000): Come Home
2. Shafiq Husayn (featuring Coultrain): Message in a Bottle
3. Jaco Pastorius: River People


17.
Bedouine
Bird Songs of a Killjoy

“I have a kind of beginner’s mind,” says Azniv Korkejian (stage name Bedouine) of writing songs on her guitar. “I’m not quite ready to get better in case it changes how the songs come out.” On her eponymous debut album in 2017, the songs came out just beautifully, thank you very much, and in a style quite wonderfully out of time. Guitar, mostly picked, occasionally strummed, accompanied by jazz percussion and minimal production allows the songs to soar and nestle comfortably into your subconscious. As for new album Bird Songs of a Killjoy, the tunes are just as memorable. “I love music from the 1960s and 1970s, simple melodies that feel strong and emotional,” says Korkejian. “With my writing, if it feels good I just run with it.”

Family Korkejian, Armenians in Syria, were musical and her father (“an incredible voice”) was a musician, gigging around the country before taking a job that moved the family to Saudi Arabia. They later settled in California, where Azniv became a sound engineer and then moved on to writing her own songs. “But wherever we were my parents had music on all the time – Armenian, Arabic and Greek traditional stuff, and pop music.”

You might have to have eagle ears to hear Arabic motifs on Bedouine’s new album but the zing of the contemporary is rarely embraced by her. “I’m worried about getting songs stuck in my head,” she says with a laugh.

Bedouine’s summer tracks:
1. Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers: All the Wrong Reasons
2. Santo and Johnny: Sleepwalk
3. Brigitte Bardot: La Madrague


18.
Yuna
Rouge

Imagine you’re cruising down the Pacific Coast Highway heading out of LA: sun shining, wind in your hair, on your way to the beach. The ideal tune for that carefree summer vibe? Yuna’s new single “Blank Marquee”, featuring rapper G-Eazy and a danceable funk riff, has to be a strong contender. “It’s the perfect song to drive to,” says the Malaysian singer, who calls the City of Angels home.

An inspiration for Muslim women and all-round boundary crosser, the 32-year-old has spent the past two years in the studio working on new album Rouge, which will be released on 12 July. She calls it a departure from the “shiny pop” that she was making before. With the encouragement of her Danish producer Robin Hannibal, the new album is more complex, embracing everything from the aforementioned funk to 1990s pop. As ever there are licks of hip-hop (guest performers include Tyler, The Creator and the UK’s Little Simz) and R&B. “This is the type of music I grew up listening to in my dad’s car,” says Yuna. “The album feels like a memory.”

Yuna admits that as her career has progressed, she’s become more aware of her position as a role model. And even if she has frustrations at being typecast on festival bills as an Asian artist, she says she’s “got to send out a positive message”. At the end of the day though, it’s the music that speaks loudest. “We decided to do something fun this time,” she says. And that’s something we can definitely get behind.

Yuna’s summer tracks:
1. Tame Impala: Borderline
2. Childish Gambino: Summertime Magic
3. Françoise Hardy: Le Temps de l’Amour


19.
Weyes Blood
Titanic Rising

Weyes Blood, the 30-year-old California-born, Pennsylvania-raised musician otherwise known as Natalie Mering, has been making music since she was four. First it was piano lessons, then school choirs. “I was really into the performative aspects of music. I was a big fan of Nirvana and I wanted to destroy my guitar,” she says, chuckling. “I found my parents’ music a little too vanilla. It’s funny that now I make music that is so inspired by the 1970s.”

Mering’s fourth album, Titanic Rising, retains the velvety vocals that evoke singer-songwriters like Joni Mitchell. But layered with synths and strings, it’s also grand and cinematic. “I find classical music to be the most emotionally moving and I think a lot of that has to do with it being used in films,” says Mering. Her first time working with Seattle-based powerhouse label Sub Pop also afforded her new opportunities, such as working with string musicians. “It’s more symphonic than the last [album] but the issues the album speaks to are huge, and the strings match that.”

Those themes include love and loss but also climate change. The album cover is a teenager’s bedroom in water (the set was built, dunked in a pool and then photographed). “A childhood bedroom is this secret place inside everybody, where they thought they knew what their life was going to be like or what the world was going to be like,” says Mering. “My goal is that people glean hope from the album. I’ve put a neat conceptual bow over the chaos of our times.”

Weyes’s summer tracks:
1. The Kinks: Lazy Old Sun
2. Lana Del Rey: Summertime Sadness
3. Barry Gibb: Midsummer Nights


20.
Phum Viphurit
Lover Boy

Thai singer-songwriter Phum Viphurit brings his tour, and perennial smile, to Europe from July. It will be his second visit in as many years as the 23-year-old prepares to launch his second album, the follow-up to Manchild. The easygoing first single from it was released last year and quickly became an anthem across Asia. The video, showing Viphurit sweet-talking a young woman along the promenade in Pattaya City, has clocked up more than 40 million views on YouTube.

Mild-mannered Viphurit is at a loss to explain the size of his following. “I don’t think anyone in Bangkok cares,” he says, laughing, as he prepares to go on stage in Hong Kong. He’s underselling himself: all his fans appear equally smitten and scream every time he smiles.

Viphurit was born in Bangkok but grew up in New Zealand before returning to the Thai capital to study film. He’s directed two of his music videos and had his own superfan moment last year when he spotted Stephen Spielberg leaving a venue in Amsterdam where he had just performed. Since then a string of sold-out concerts have built up the pressure to deliver more musical hits. It’s an experience that Viphurit has taken in his stride: “Hello, Anxiety”, released earlier this year, was his cheery antidote to the dreaded second-album syndrome. “Heaven knows we’re lost,” he sings on the chorus. “But the sun still shines so we’ll be fine.” Beat that for a summer motto.

Phum’s summer tracks:
1. Mac DeMarco: Salad Days
2. Bombay Bicycle Club: Always Like This
3. Rupert Holmes: Escape (The Pina Colada Song)


For the record


21.
Music’s Not Dead
Bexhill-on-Sea


22.
World of Echo
London


23.
Ella Records
Tokyo


24.
Roastin’ Records
Cape Town


25.
Louisiana Music Factory
New Orleans


City festivals


26.
Ejekt
Athens


27.
Bilbao BBK
Bilbao


28.
Pitchfork Music Festival
Chicago


29.
Way out West
Gothenburg


30.
Flow Festival
Helsinki


31.
Summer Sonic
Tokyo


32.
EDP CoolJazz
Cascais


33.
Dekmantel
Amsterdam


34.
Congés Annulés
Luxembourg City


35.
Øyafestivalen
Oslo


Old-school nightclubs


36.
Cova D’en Xoroi
Menorca

In 1964, when four friends from Alaior announced plans to turn Menorca’s coastal caverns into a music venue, they were granted permits with relative ease. Their bold vision continues to fuel seaside euphoria more than 50 years later.


37.
Les Caves du Roy
Saint-Tropez

One of France’s most mythical nightclubs, Les Caves du Roy, is part of the Byblos Hotel in Saint-Tropez. This is the club that everyone dreams about getting into – and where those who don’t manage to are turned away gracefully by Junior the doorman. A queue of 500 people can often be seen outside until 05.00 – because the pay-off is worth the effort.


38.
Balthazar
Athens

The selling point of this restaurant-cum-bar is its shady garden (a rarity in central Athens). On balmy summer evenings it draws in the capital’s residents seeking an alternative to the coast. Housed in a neoclassical villa, the club has had different iterations since it opened in the 1970s. Under the ownership of the Pitsili brothers it now has a bright interior complete with chichi chandeliers.


Songs to get you dancing


39.
Georgia
About Work the Dancefloor

This track is made for letting loose. Think the Drive soundtrack on steroids.


40.
Clara Luciani
La Grenade

The sultry French chanteuse delivers a tune that’s all potent basslines and 1980s beats.


41.
L’Impératrice
Dreaming of You

L’Impératrice’s debut album is a wonder from start to finish but its soulful title track is our dance-worthy highlight.


42.
Iza
Brisa

A delicious 1990s reggae beat makes this song irresistible.


43.
Aya Nakamura
Pookie

“Pookie” has plenty of swagger and will give all hips plenty of swaying power.


Post-night-out TV shows


44.
Magpie
Yes

Scratch the surface of this apparently straightforward crime drama and you’ll find clever storytelling, particularly in building the main character Asa Katz. An early release sees him out of prison after 16 years for murder – but with strings attached. In navigating a network of conflicting interests we see his personality unfold.


45.
Milk and Honey
Channel 4

Israel is well known for its thrillers but it’s also home to comedies. Pick of the bunch is Milk and Honey, which follows a group of hopeless thirty-somethings who start a male-escort service to help finance an apiary.


46.
Hierro
Movistar+

The most remote island of the Canary archipelago, the paradise-like El Hierro is the setting for this gripping crime thriller. A judge, sent to the island as punishment, is faced with a murder case: a young man has been killed on his wedding day. Hierro’s stunning landscape provides a beautiful backdrop.


47.
The Righteous Gemstones
HBO

A witty window into the world of televangelists, where greed-fuelled deception is carried out in the name of Jesus Christ. John Goodman plays the Gemstone family’s patriarch, Eli, and is exceptional. This series will be a true revelation.


48.
The Loudest Voice
Showtime

The nemesis of fair-and-balanced news reporting is the focus of this drama based on a book by Gabriel Sherman. Russell Crowe and Naomi Watts are in fine form. Expect a scathing account of Roger Ailes, who worked for Richard Nixon and Donald Trump, and Fox News.


Smart books to read


49.
Merchants of Truth: Inside the News Revolution
Jill Abramson

A behind-the-scenes look at the struggles faced by four major news platforms battling to survive.


50.
A Thousand Small Sanities
Adam Gopnik

Gopnik issues this apology for liberalism – reminding readers that the term is about more than economic policy.


51.
Faber & Faber: The Untold Story
Toby Faber

Toby Faber’s story of his family’s publishing house introduces us to anecdotes from the past century’s literary greats.


52.
Walter Gropius
Fiona MacCarthy

MacCarthy’s biography of the Bauhaus founder explores the lasting impact of his work and – most interestingly – his intriguing personal life.


53.
The Castle on Sunset
Shawn Levy

The Chateau Marmont hotel is a key witness to Hollywood’s history, which is juicily recounted here.


Brand new ventures


54.
Fluentum
Berlin

Berlin’s cultural evolution has long been about repurposing historical buildings for the arts: breweries have morphed into cinemas or museums, several Second World War bunkers are now art spaces, an old pumping station is a dance venue. Now, in the far west of the city, a space in the former US army headquarters – in a building built for the German Luftwaffe in the mid-1930s – has launched as a frame for video art.


55.
Moco
Montpellier

Debuting in late June, Montpellier’s newest contemporary-art museum will rotate international collections borrowed from foundations, corporations, private collectors or other museums – and is likely to become one of the region’s biggest players. The 19th-century mansion it’s housed in was formerly the glitzy Hôtel Montcalm, refurbished by architect Philippe Chiambaretta to accommodate art in different mediums and sizes.


56.
Centre Photographique Marseille
Marseille


57.
Massimo De Carlo
Milan

“I believe artists are tired of working in galleries that are identical all over the world,” says Massimo De Carlo, Milan’s most prominent gallerist. He recently closed his flagship white cube in the Lambrate neighbourhood and relocated to the Piola district’s Casa Corbellini-Wassermann, a handsome villa constructed in 1936.


58.
Noma Sculpture Park
New Orleans


Playlist for a road trip


59.
Julia Jacklin
Pressure to Party

A hit on the drum kit’s cowbell launches some chilled guitar riffs courtesy of Australian singer-songwriter Julia Jacklin.


60.
Flamingods
Paradise Drive

We move into psychedelic territory with Bahrain-born, London-based quartet Flamingod’s synth-infused tune – there’s more than a hint of the Middle East here.


61.
Unperfect
Looking for a Hug

UK girl band Unperfect have produced a pretty perfect pop tune with a captivating bassline.


62.
Heavenstamp
L.O.V.E, Right?

Time to go all-out with shamelessly cheesy Japanese pop. Just try matching those high notes in your sing-a-long.


63.
Sigrid
Mine Right Now

Norwegian singer Sigrid turns it up a notch with an irresistible series of beat drops.


64.
Carly Rae Jepsen
Julien

This Canadian superstar knows how to craft a spotless, smooth pop tune – this is proof.


65.
Liberato
Tu T’e Scurdat’ ‘e Me

Roll down the windows – this mellow hit by Naples’ Liberato is best enjoyed with a warm breeze in your hair.


66.
Ibibio Sound Machine
Tell Me (Doko Mien)

West African funk and its signature drums combine with spot-on electro; just you wait until the brass section bursts onto the scene.


67.
Lucette
Angel

If Abba had gone on a long roadtrip through the depths of America’s plains, they’d sound a lot like this.


68.
Nilüfer Yanya
Heat Rises

With warm vocals, singer Nilüfer Yanya brings this section to an atmospheric end.


Newstands to stock up at


69.
Edicola Erno
Rome

Andrea Mercuri had always loved going to her edicola (kiosk) in the neigbourhood of Prati and watched with sadness as it stood shut and forlorn for the past seven years. But she and three friends decided they would buy it and turn it around at the end of 2018. Erno, which is an acronym for No Ordinary Edicola in Rome, is exactly that – and now serves an impressive selection of art, design travel and fashion publications. It also sells a healthy roster of national (and a few international) dailies.
Piazza Amerigo Capponi


70.
Quick Quick
Atlanta

On the first floor of Ponce City Market – a mixed-use development in Atlanta’s former Sears, Roebuck & Co building – is Quick Quick, the city’s best spot to pick up independent and niche magazines since opening in 2017.


71.
O Manifesto
Porto


City magazines


72.
Montecristo
Vancouver


73.
Arcades Magazine
Berlin


74.
August Journal
Copenhagen


Newspapers to pick up


75.
Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles


76.
Micro
Geneva


77.
The Saturday Paper
Melbourne


Exhibitions for a weekend


78.
Seascapes
Guggenheim Bilbao

While you’re here… three more things to do:
1. At the Guggenheim, pop into Lucio Fontana: On the Threshold, an exhibition of minimal works by the Argentinian-Italian founder of spatialism.
2. Head to the Museum of Fine Arts for a display of photographs documenting early 20th-century Basque life.
3. Sample your way through the city’s best pintxos bars, especially those on Calle del Músico Ledesma, with tables spilling out onto the street.


79.
Miriam Cahn: I as Human
Haus der Kunst Munich

While you’re here… three more things to do:
1. The unfinished palace of Herrenchiemsee, started by Ludwig II in 1878, is the dramatic setting for modernist works by artists such as Kazuo Shiraga, Dan Flavin and Arnulf Rainer.
2. Forever Young – 10 Years of Museum Brandhorst shows off many of the best contemporary artworks collected by Udo Brandhorst since 1970.
3. The hottest commercial gallery in town is Deborah Schamoni’s. Die Marmory Show IV features eight emerging artist, including Alexandra Bircken, fresh from her breakthrough Venice Biennale show.


80.
Sight: Antony Gormley
Delos

While you’re here… three more things to do:
1. Catch a boat to Tinos to see the work of TQP artists in residence at the Tinos Quarry Platform.
2. Syros’ International Film Festival is an open-air celebration of experimental and narrative cinema.
3. Housed in a former tomato tinning factory, Santorini Arts Factory hosts exhibitions, theatre and music.


81.
Less is a Bore
ICA Boston

While you’re here… three more things to do:
1. Take the watershuttle across the marina to the ICA Watershed, a seasonal project space in the Boston Harbor Shipyard, to see film-maker John Akomfrah’s environmental epic Purple.
2. Motto Books at the Carpenter Center for Visual Arts – an offshoot of the Berlin-based publisher and distributor – is a great place to find artists’ books and small-run magazines.
3. Zone 3 is a Harvard University-initiated “arts hub” in a former dry-cleaning factory. This summer it launches a podcast studio, movie nights and exhibitions.


82.
Setouchi Triennale
Seto Inland Sea

While you’re here… three more things to do:
1. The Hiroshima Peace Memorial has recently reopened after an extensive refurbishment.
2. One of Japan’s most beautiful landscaped green spaces, 400-year-old Ritsurin Garden is especially known for its impressive collection of pine trees.
3. Anyone who steps through the Motonosumi Shrine, a winding tunnel of 123 red gates, is said to gain good fortune.


Thrillers to read by the pool


83.
The Department of Sensitive Crimes
Alexander McCall Smith

Described as a work of “Scandi blanc”, the latest venture from British writer Alexander McCall Smith is intended to be a cheerier take on the rather gloomy world of Scandinavian crime fiction. It follows a Swedish detective called Ulf Varg as he investigates abnormal happenings in Malmö.


84.
The Last
Hanna Jameson

Nuclear war has broken out, the end of the world is near and 20 survivors remain in a hotel in Switzerland – among them, a killer. When a girl’s body is found in a water tank, paranoia takes hold and a US historian called Jon Keller – the protagonist of Jameson’s dystopian murder mystery – decides to investigate.


85.
The Overnight Kidnapper
Andrea Camilleri

Sicilian novelist Camilleri is the master of Italian crime writing, with more than 30 books under his belt. The latest instalment in the Inspector Montalbano series sees the ageing detective search for an oddball kidnapper who leaves his victims unharmed, their possessions untouched. As always, deftly translated by the US poet Stephen Sartarell.


86.
Diary of a Murderer: And Other Stories
Young-Ha Kim

The novella at the heart of this collection is about a former serial killer struggling with memory loss. His final target: his daughter’s boyfriend. The short stories that follow involve childhood friends, kidnapping and the pursuit of creativity. Seoul-based author Kim has written seven novels and five short-story collections, and won almost every major Korean literary award out there.


87.
Article 353
Tanguy Viel

The 23rd piece of fiction from French author Viel, translated by former journalist William Rodarmor, is billed as part courtroom drama, part psychological thriller. The novel noir takes place off the coast of Brittany and is narrated by a man called Martial Kermeur, who has been arrested for the murder of real-estate developer Antoine Lazenec. Kermeur’s eerie tale retraces the events leading up to the moment when he threw Lazenec overboard.


Podcasts for your flight


88.
The Last Bohemians
UK

Pioneering women reflect on their lives as mavericks, revealing real life tales of sex, drugs and rock’n‘roll alongside conversations about being women and making art. From swinging Soho, where artist and writer Molly Parkin had her first kiss with Louis Armstrong, to rural Oxfordshire where lsd campaigner Amanda Feilding lives, the series documents the ripping up of rulebooks.


89.
Everything is Alive
USA

Inanimate objects (pillows, lamp-posts, etc) are given a name and a voice and then interviewed by host Ian Chillag. The results are thought-provoking conversations about what it is like to fulfil a purpose, for an amusing, moving and strangely relatable listen.


90.
The Allusionist
USA

Helen Zaltzman presents short and sharp episodes celebrating the English language. Recent instalments include an exploration of the lexicon associated with Seattle’s grunge scene and a discussion on why the word “gossip” has so many negative connotations.


91.
Power Corrupts
UK

Ever wondered how you go about rigging an election? Who really benefits from the international arms trade? Where is the world’s first narcostate? Outspoken Trump critic and Monocle 24 regular Brian Klaas has the answers.


92.
Kerning Cultures
Middle East

Skirting stereotypical narratives of the Middle East, this podcast presents rich documentary-style storytelling about the region. A recent round of funding means followers can expect a new drama series and fiction, in addition to more shows in both English and Arabic.


93.
Kalk Bay Books
Cape Town

Overlooking a harbour dotted with bobbing, brightly painted fishing boats, this bookshop is petite but it hoards an impressive selection. Quality trumps quantity: on comedy wooden shelves you’ll encounter a smartly edited array of both international and South African fiction, compelling memoirs, delectable cookbooks and more.


94.
Better Read than Dead
Sydney


95.
Black Bird Bookstore
San Francisco


96.
Little Prince Bookstore
Tel Aviv

Ten minutes from Jerusalem Beach on Tel Aviv’s sweeping coastline, this bookship and café is an institution in the Israeli city. Named after the hero of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s novel, the King George street shop was set up in 2001 by Naim Cohen.

Business has been booming ever since the opening hours were stretched; the narrow shop and book-lined back-garden terrace remain open well into the night. Desks and comfortable chairs run the length of the room, making this a shady spot for an afternoon break from the sand. Reward yourself with ice coffee, salad and falafels – or fruity cocktails come happy hour.
19 King George


97.
Les Insolites
Tangier

Born in Cannes, Stéphanie Gaou settled in Tangier in 2003. Six years later she opened Les Insolites in a former furniture restoration workshop with a dazzling view of the Strait of Gibraltar. The space has since become an anchor of the city’s cultural community, regularly hosting book signings, photography exhibitions, lectures and gigs.

The majority of titles stacked along the sunshine-yellow shelves are in Gaou’s mother tongue but the shop also carries a selection of English-language books. Gaou recommends visitors pick up a copy of Spirits of Tangier by Tessa Codrington: “It’s part coffee-table book, part family album of the city, documenting the eccentricities of Tangier.”
28 Rue Khalid Ibn El Oualid


Seafront galleries


98.
Norton Museum of Art
West Palm Beach


99.
Norval Foundation
Cape Town


100.
Beelden aan Zee
The Hague

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