From the September 2023 Issue
How Late It Was
Blasted with Antiquity: Old Age and the Consolations of Literature
By David Ellis
LR
From the July 2023 Issue
Anni Mirabiles
Pax: War and Peace in Rome’s Golden Age
By Tom Holland
LR
From the November 2022 Issue
Over the Sea to Skye
‘Pretty Young Rebel’: The Life of Flora Macdonald
By Flora Fraser
LR
From the November 2021 Issue
Great Scott!
From the September 2021 Issue
A Convivial Chap Led Easily Astray
The Sins of G K Chesterton
By Richard Ingrams
From the June 2020 Issue
A Class Act
A Schoolmaster’s War: Harry Rée, British Agent in the French Resistance
By Jonathan Rée (ed)
LR
From the November 1989 Issue
Peter Pan Laid Bare
Bernard Shaw II: The Pursuit of Power
By Michael Holroyd
LR
From the September 2019 Issue
An Old-fashioned Kind of Spy
Master of Deception: The Wartime Adventures of Peter Fleming
By Alan Ogden
LR
From the August 2019 Issue
Character Building
Fabulous Monsters: Dracula, Alice, Superman, and Other Literary Friends
By Alberto Manguel
LR
From the April 1999 Issue
Much More Useful than Writing Novels
The Lighthouse Stevensons
By Bella Bathurst
LR
From the February 2019 Issue
Aesthete with a Cause
From the December 2018 Issue
In Brigand Country
LR
From the September 2018 Issue
Law by Name, Lawless by Nature
John Law: A Scottish Adventurer of the Eighteenth Century
By James Buchan
LR
From the March 2018 Issue
He Took the Path of Most Resistance
The Saboteur: True Adventures of the Gentleman Commando Who Took on the Nazis
By Paul Kix
LR
From the November 2017 Issue
Diary: Proust’s Progress
From the October 2017 Issue
Pillaged People
Rome: A History in Seven Sackings
By Matthew Kneale
LR
From the January 1998 Issue
Even So, He Had No Right to Beat Up Bibbles
D H Lawrence: Dying Game 1922–1930
By David Ellis
LR
From the July 2017 Issue
A First-Rate Education
Flaubert in the Ruins of Paris: The Story of a Friendship, a Novel, and a Terrible Year
By Peter Brooks
LR
From the May 2017 Issue
Toxic Relations
City of Light, City of Poison: Murder, Magic, and the First Police Chief of Paris
By Holly Tucker
LR
From the July 1996 Issue
A Writer Who Needs to be Saved From His Admirers
The Man in the Mirror of the Book: A Life of Jorge Luis Borges
By James Woodall
LR
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London's East End was long synonymous with poverty and sweatshops, while its West End was associated with glamour and high society. But when it came to the fashion industry, were the differences really so profound?
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