From the June 2014 Issue Centaurs of the Steppes The Mongol Empire: Genghis Khan, His Heirs, and the Founding of Modern China By John Man LR
From the October 2006 Issue The Hoyden Within Kate: The Woman who was Katharine Hepburn By William J Mann LR
From the July 2006 Issue Witch, Bitch or Ingénue? Bette Davis: The Girl Who Walked Home Alone By Charlotte Chandler LR
From the March 2012 Issue How the West Was Lost Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanche Tribe By S C Gwynne LR
From the March 2005 Issue The Deadly Decorator John the Painter: Britain’s First International Terrorist By Jessica Warner LR
From the April 2005 Issue Year of the Sea Dog England and the Spanish Armada: The Necessary Quarrel By James McDermott LR
From the November 2012 Issue What’s Your Take? The Big Screen: The Story of the Movies and What They Did to Us By David Thomson LR
From the December 2012 Issue Who’s Afraid of Elizabeth Taylor? The Richard Burton Diaries By Chris Williams (Ed) LR
From the April 2014 Issue Lights, Camera, Action Five Came Back: A Story of Hollywood and the Second World War By Mark Harris LR
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My review of Sonia Faleiro's powerful new book in this month's @Lit_Review.
https://literaryreview.co.uk/where-rituals-come-home-to-roost
for @Lit_Review, I wrote about Freezing Point by Anders Bodelsen, a speculative fiction banger about the cultural consequences of biohacking—Huel dinners, sunny days, negligible culture—that resembles a certain low-tax city for the Turkey teethed
Ray Philp - Forever Young
Ray Philp: Forever Young - Freezing Point by Anders Bodelsen (Translated from Danish by Joan Tate)
literaryreview.co.uk
‘A richly rewarding book, which succeeds in painting a vivid portrait of one of the 17th century’s most intriguing figures.'
Alexander Lee's review of 'Lying abroad' in the latest issue of the @Lit_Review, read it here:
'Lying abroad' is out now!
Alexander Lee - Rise of the Machinations
Alexander Lee: Rise of the Machinations - Lying Abroad: Henry Wotton and the Invention of Diplomacy by Carol Chillington Rutter
literaryreview.co.uk