From the November 2000 Issue Eric Blair: Grocer Orwell: Wintry Conscience of a Generation By Jeffrey Meyers LR
From the December 1999 Issue Case History of a Literary Groupie Stephen Spender: A Life in Modernism By David Lemming
From the September 1999 Issue A Worthy Enthusiasm The Penguin Book of Twentieth-Century Essays By Ian Hamilton (ed)
From the December 2016 Issue A-Changin’ Times The New Yorker Book of the 60s: Story of a Decade By Henry Finder (ed) LR
From the October 2016 Issue Hiding in Plain Sight Game of Spies: The Secret Agent, the Traitor and the Nazi By Paddy Ashdown LR
From the September 2016 Issue Gubbins’s Guerillas The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare: Churchill’s Mavericks – Plotting Hitler’s Defeat By Giles Milton LR
From the June 2016 Issue England, My England Their Promised Land: My Grandparents in Love and War By Ian Buruma LR
From the December 2015 Issue Plumped Pages The New Yorker Book of the 50s: Story of a Decade By Henry Finder (ed) LR
From the November 2015 Issue Homeland Insecurity The Hotel Years: Wanderings in Europe between the Wars By Joseph Roth (Translated by Michael Hofmann) LR
From the August 2015 Issue Glittering Entries Going Up: To Cambridge and Beyond – A Writer’s Memoir By Frederic Raphael LR
From the March 2003 Issue Press Gangs and Pensioners Limeys: The True Story of One Man's War Against Ignorance, The Establishment and the Deadly Scurvy By David I Harvie LR
From the October 2003 Issue Well Met By Moonlight Words of Mercury By Patrick Leigh Fermor, Artemis Cooper (ed) LR
From the March 2015 Issue Queen of the Slush Pile Loose Connections: From Narva Maantee to Great Russell Street By Esther Menell
From the June 2004 Issue The Clownish Poet Stephen Spender: The Authorized Biography By John Sutherland LR
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Richard Flanagan's Question 7 is this year's winner of the @BGPrize.
In her review from our June issue, @rosalyster delves into Tasmania, nuclear physics, romance and Chekhov.
Rosa Lyster - Kiss of Death
Rosa Lyster: Kiss of Death - Question 7 by Richard Flanagan
literaryreview.co.uk
‘At times, Orbital feels almost like a long poem.’
@sam3reynolds on Samantha Harvey’s Orbital, the winner of this year’s @TheBookerPrizes
Sam Reynolds - Islands in the Sky
Sam Reynolds: Islands in the Sky - Orbital by Samantha Harvey
literaryreview.co.uk
Nick Harkaway, John le Carré's son, has gone back to the 1960s with a new novel featuring his father's anti-hero, George Smiley.
But is this the missing link in le Carré’s oeuvre, asks @ddguttenplan, or is there something awry?
D D Guttenplan - Smiley Redux
D D Guttenplan: Smiley Redux - Karla’s Choice by Nick Harkaway
literaryreview.co.uk