Jason Isaacs shares his favourite books
The actor picks works by Philip Roth, David Sedaris and John Irving

Actor Jason Isaacs picks his favourite books. He will be reading at the Follow the Stars Carol Concert for Macmillan Cancer Support on 6 December, at Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford.
The Human Stain
Philip Roth, 2000
Roth inhabits his protagonist's world so perfectly, navigating his big secret with such humanity that it beggars belief that it is not autobiographical. Read it in awe.
Subscribe to The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.

Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
Available on The Week Bookshop
The World According to Garp
John Irving, 1978
I've not revisited this since, aged 15, it reignited a love for reading that skateboarding had sidelined. I didn't look up for three days as I devoured its mix of richly complex characters, gasp-out-loud plotting and heartbreaking misadventures.
Available on The Week Bookshop
There's Nothing Wrong With Her
Kate Weinberg, 2024
My wife has had debilitating long Covid for three years. This delicious book was inspired by the author's similar struggle and gave me an insight into some of the despair she wrestles with daily. It's a witty tale of panic, lust, the search for identity and the helpful companionship of a long-dead Italian nobleman.
Available on The Week Bookshop
Santaland Diaries
David Sedaris, 1999
Although all of his books are hilarious, do listen to him first so that you can hear his unique voice in your head as you read. This contains his account of being a Macy's Christmas elf, excerpts from which I'll be reading at the Macmillan carol service.
Available on The Week Bookshop
The Magician's Nephew
C.S. Lewis, 1955
I loved all the Narnia books as a kid. When Peter was told he wouldn't be coming back, I understood something devastating about mortality. I picked this one because Greta Gerwig is about to make a film of it, which I can't wait to see.
Available on The Week Bookshop
Jerusalem
Simon Sebag Montefiore, 2011
For any strident virtue-signallers who think the issues in the Middle East can be reduced to a slogan or easy labels, a definitive, apolitical, mesmerising account of the most invaded and occupied city on Earth and the carnage that built today's headlines.
Available on The Week Bookshop
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
-
June 22 editorial cartoons
Cartoons Sunday’s political cartoons include a SpaceX flight, Bibi pulling Donald Trump toward war, and an ICE agent looking like a bank robber
-
5 bunker-busting cartoons about the Israel-Iran war
Cartoons Political cartoonists take on Iran waiting for Pete Hegseth to leak war plans and Donald Trump's wish for a Nobel prize
-
Malaysia's delicious food and glorious beaches
The Week Recommends From 'colourful' George Town to the 'jungled interior' of Langkawi, Malaysia is incredibly diverse
-
6 smart, surprising food books to drag you through the summer months
The Week Recommends BBQ and why we consume the way we do are just two of the tackled topics
-
Hot for summer with these 10 tours from some of music's best artists
The Week Recommends Get ready for sing-along sunshine
-
10 upcoming albums to stream on the beach this summer
The Week Recommends Ring in the sunshine with a selection of new albums
-
These 8 superb cocktails welcome summer with open arms
The Week Recommends Everything required to get you through warm — or sweltering — weather
-
7 touring theater productions that are out to bring the joy
The Week Recommends 'Hamilton' and 'Wicked' never die, and neither does ABBA
-
Video games to immerse yourself in this summer, including Mario Kart World and Shinobi: Art of Vengeance
The Week Recommends Nintendo launches the Switch 2 with an exclusive Mario Kart entry, and Sega revisits an arcade classic
-
One great cookbook: 'The New Book of Middle Eastern Food'
The Week Recommends Where the academic and the practical coexist
-
Comedians to see on tour this summer
the week recommends Beat the heat with humor