From the April 2018 Issue A Don Among the Dealers Living with Leonardo: Fifty Years of Sanity and Insanity in the Art World and Beyond By Martin Kemp LR
From the May 2017 Issue For Queen & Company London’s Triumph: Merchant Adventurers and the Tudor City By Stephen Alford LR
From the April 2017 Issue The Great Hard Drive in the Sky To Be a Machine: Adventures among Cyborgs, Utopians, Hackers, and the Futurists Solving the Modest Problem of Death By Mark O'Connell
From the July 2015 Issue Raison d’Etre How the French Think: An Affectionate Portrait of an Intellectual People By Sudhir Hazareesingh LR
From the May 2015 Issue There’s Treasure Everywhere Carnal... to the Point of Scandal By Kevin Jackson LR
From the April 2011 Issue Self-Fashioning Dressing Up: Cultural Identity in Renaissance Europe By Ulinka Rublack LR
From the July 2010 Issue Eucliding Me? Alex's Adventures in Numberland: Dispatches from the Wonderful World of Mathematics By Alex Bellos LR
From the June 2010 Issue Political Pornography A King’s Ransom: The Life of Charles Théveneau de Morande, Blackmailer, Scandalmonger and Master-Spy By Simon Burrows 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?
Sharman Kadish - Winkle-pickers & Bum Freezers
Sharman Kadish: Winkle-pickers & Bum Freezers - Fashion City: How Jewish Londoners Shaped Global Style; Fashion City: ...
literaryreview.co.uk
In 1982, Donald Rumsfeld presented Saddam Hussein with a pair of golden spurs. Two decades later he was dropping bunker-busting bombs on his palaces.
Where did the US-Iraqi relationship go wrong?
Rory Mccarthy - The Case of the Vanishing Missiles
Rory Mccarthy: The Case of the Vanishing Missiles - The Achilles Trap: Saddam Hussein, the United States and the ...
literaryreview.co.uk
Barbara Comyns was a dog breeder, a house painter, a piano restorer, a landlady... And a novelist.
@nclarke14 on the lengths 20th-century women writers had to go to make ends meet:
Norma Clarke - Her Family & Other Animals
Norma Clarke: Her Family & Other Animals - Barbara Comyns: A Savage Innocence by Avril Horner
literaryreview.co.uk