Virginia Ironside
A Hairdresser & A Gentleman
Vidal: The Autobiography
By Vidal Sassoon
Macmillan 456pp £20
One great thing about the Daily Mail is the way it can take a half-baked book and turn it, in three short episodes, into a gripping read. That’s what they did with Vidal Sassoon’s autobiography, filleting out all the fascinating bits and presenting them as a rattling good story.
Unfortunately, when you get to read the real thing, you find 456 pages of name-dropping, descriptions of shows, business deals, trips to Israel and failed marriages, all delivered with the same cheery attitude until we reach Sassoon’s eighty-second year. Even the potentially hair-raising beginning in Petticoat Lane, from
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
Coleridge was fifty-four lines into ‘Kubla Khan’ before a knock on the door disturbed him. He blamed his unfinished poem on ‘a person on business from Porlock’.
Who was this arch-interrupter? Joanna Kavenna goes looking for the person from Porlock.
Joanna Kavenna - Do Not Disturb
Joanna Kavenna: Do Not Disturb
literaryreview.co.uk
Russia’s recent efforts to destabilise the Baltic states have increased enthusiasm for the EU in these places. With Euroscepticism growing in countries like France and Germany, @owenmatth wonders whether Europe’s salvation will come from its periphery.
Owen Matthews - Sea of Troubles
Owen Matthews: Sea of Troubles - Baltic: The Future of Europe by Oliver Moody
literaryreview.co.uk
Many laptop workers will find Vincenzo Latronico’s PERFECTION sends shivers of uncomfortable recognition down their spine. I wrote about why for @Lit_Review
https://literaryreview.co.uk/hashtag-living