June 2026, Issue 552 Peter Moore on George Forster * Anne Perkins on the Balfour family * William Whyte on British dons * Ian Thomson on the fall of the USSR * Joe Moshenska on Spinoza * Jeremy Treglown on Juan Carlos of Spain * D J Taylor on Henrietta Moraes * Howard Davies on recession * Martin Vander Weyer on Goldman Sachs * Piers Brendon on disinformation * Richard Vinen on Kissinger * Bettina Bildhauer on medieval health * John Mullan on Emily Brontë * Joseph Hone on Jonathan Swift * Duncan Fallowell on Lady Chatterley * George Cochrane on Eric Ambler * A J Lees on neurorehabilitation * John Phipps on Dante * Stephen Smith on stolen art * Caroline Moorehead on wartime love * Norma Clarke on cooking for one * Nigel Andrew on birds * Olivia Ho on M John Harrison * Philip Womack on Shakespeare’s neighbours * and much, much more…
The Current Issue
Peter Moore
The Traveller: The Revolutionary Life of George Forster and his Search for Humanity
By Andrea Wulf
An exemplary tour of the High Enlightenment might go something like this. You’d begin in the streets of 1760s London to feel the pulse of Georgian commerce. You’d then hop aboard one of Captain Cook’s colliers and cruise through the Pacific, having encounters every day. Returning to Europe you might watch Benjamin Franklin in diplomatic action at Passy and dine with Casanova in Vienna, before sailing up the Rhine with Humboldt. Having inspected the Soho Manufactory in Birmingham and admired the picturesque scenery of the Peak District, you’d cross the Channel just in time for the grand and bloody finale in Paris. Only this isn’t a fantasy. This... read more
More Articles from this Issue
William Whyte
Twilight of the Dons: British Intellectuals from World War II to Thatcherism
By Colin Kidd
Arriving as an undergraduate at Cambridge in 1961, Terry Eagleton was both overawed and underwhelmed by his supervisor, a man he calls Greenway in his memoir. ‘Greenway was the first truly civilised man I had ever encountered,’ Eagleton recalls. ‘He knew all about cheeses, wisteria, Rubens’s... read more
Ian Thomson
The August Coup: The Destruction of the Soviet Union and the Making of New Russia 1985–1991
By Robert Service
In the autumn of 1988, the Independent magazine sent me to Estonia to report on the Kremlin’s waning power in the Soviet Baltic. Alexander Chancellor, the editor, sensed that the USSR was in trouble: Estonia was agitating for independence; Poland, Hungary and other Eastern bloc... read more
A J Lees
How to Use a Fork: Stories of Mending the Broken Brain
By Orlando Swayne
When I became a doctor in the late 1960s, patients admitted with a stroke were nursed out of sight in quiet side cubicles, removed from the bustle of the open wards. On bedside visits we encouraged them to move their lifeless limbs, to speak and to work hard with the therapists. When they despaired, we offered hope, telling... read more
John Mullan
This Dark Night: The Life of Emily Brontë
By Deborah Lutz
We know so little about Emily Brontë. There are just a few snapshots, like the vivid recollection of her sister Charlotte’s great friend Ellen Nussey: 'Her extreme reserve seemed impenetrable, yet she was intensely loveable … one of her rare expressive looks was something to remember through life, there was such a depth of soul and feeling... read more
Anne Perkins
Burn This Letter: Love and Trouble in a Marriage of Four
By Susan Pedersen
The day after nineteen-year-old Betty Bulwer-Lytton, daughter of the Earl of Lytton, accepted a proposal of marriage from the rising Conservative politician Gerald Balfour, she received a different kind of proposal, a letter from a woman she barely knew, proposing ‘an intimate woman friendship’. Lady Frances... read more
Adrian Tahourdin
Writers in Whites: How a Group of Literary Cricketers Changed English Culture
By Ollie Randall
In this engaging and well-researched book, Ollie Randall sets out to show how cricket and literature worked in a symbiotic relationship for several groups of writers from the 1880s until the early 1960s. Lasting friendships were made and careers were helped along in the course of matches... read more
Most Read
moreMichael Reid
Lula! The Man, the Myth and a Dream of Latin America
By Richard Lapper
Peter Jones
Peter Jones Welcomes Five Books on the Olympics
William Whyte
Twilight of the Dons: British Intellectuals from World War II to Thatcherism
By Colin Kidd
Jonathan Keates
The Fire in the Mountain: Sicily, Etna and Her People
By Helena Attlee
Across Sicily with Garibaldi’s Thousand: An Adventure in Landscape and Italian Memory
By Tim Parks
Erik Linstrum
The African Kingdom of Gold: Britain and the Asante Treasure
By Barnaby Phillips
From the Archives
moreFrom the March 2020 issue
Peter Conrad
Warhol: A Life as Art
By Blake Gopnik
From the August 1995 issue
Syrie Johnson
Small Holdings
By Nicola Barker
From the June 1999 issue
Christopher Hitchens
Some Times in America
By Alexander Chancellor
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My review of How to Use a Fork @Lit_Review
via @Lit_Review
A J Lees - Brain Storms
A J Lees: Brain Storms - How to Use a Fork: Stories of Mending the Broken Brain by Orlando Swayne
literaryreview.co.uk
In the June 2026 issue of @Lit_Review, I review Suzy Hansen’s From Life Itself.
Kaya Genç - When the Shine Rubs Off
Kaya Genç: When the Shine Rubs Off - From Life Itself: Turkey and Istanbul in the Age of Erdoğan by Suzy Hansen
literaryreview.co.uk
out in @Lit_Review today with a little review of alvaro enrigue’s dizzying “now i surrender”