From the May 2022 Issue Castles of Concrete Modern Buildings in Britain: A Gazetteer By Owen Hatherley
From the April 2022 Issue Four Wheels Good The Car: The Rise and Fall of the Machine that Made the Modern World By Bryan Appleyard LR
From the June 2021 Issue Et Tu, Brute? Day of the Assassins: A History of Political Murder By Michael Burleigh
From the February 2021 Issue Estuary German The Sea View Has Me Again: Uwe Johnson in Sheerness By Patrick Wright
From the October 2020 Issue Neolithic Concrete Wonders Fake Heritage: Why We Rebuild Monuments By John Darlington LR
From the July 2020 Issue Lest We Forget Prisoners of History: What Monuments to the Second World War Tell Us About Our History and Ourselves By Keith Lowe
From the March 2020 Issue State Building Architecture in Global Socialism: Eastern Europe, West Africa, and the Middle East in the Cold War By Lukasz Stanek LR
From the December 2019 Issue Babylon on Sea Wicked City: The Many Cultures of Marseille By Nicholas Hewitt LR
From the October 2019 Issue Happy-Clappy Brutalism 100 Churches 100 Years By Susannah Charlton, Elain Harwood & Clare Price (edd) LR
From the May 2019 Issue To the Innards of the Earth Underland: A Deep Time Journey By Robert Macfarlane
From the December 2018 Issue England’s California? The Buildings of England: Dorset By Michael Hill, John Newman & Nikolaus Pevsner LR
From the July 2018 Issue Man of Les People Revolution Française: Emmanuel Macron and the Quest to Reinvent a Nation By Sophie Pedder
From the March 2018 Issue Root & Branch Reform New Forest: The Forging of a Landscape By Hadrian Cook
From the December 2017 Issue Construction Deconstructed Four Walls and a Roof: The Complex Nature of a Simple Profession By Reinier de Graaf LR
From the September 2017 Issue Rogues’ Gallery The Age of Decadence: Britain 1880 to 1914 By Simon Heffer LR
From the July 2017 Issue Facing the Music Vinyl.Album.Cover.Art: The Complete Hipgnosis Catalogue By Aubrey Powell
From the March 2017 Issue Words Fail Me It’s Been Said Before: A Guide to the Use and Abuse of Clichés By Orin Hargraves LR
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
It is a triumph @arthistorynews and my review @Lit_Review is here!
In just thirteen years, George Villiers rose from plain squire to become the only duke in England and the most powerful politician in the land. Does a new biography finally unravel the secrets of his success?
John Adamson investigates.
John Adamson - Love Island with Ruffs
John Adamson: Love Island with Ruffs - The Scapegoat: The Brilliant Brief Life of the Duke of Buckingham by Lucy Hughes-Hallett
literaryreview.co.uk
During the 1930s, Winston Churchill retired to Chartwell, his Tudor-style country house in Kent, where he plotted a return to power.
Richard Vinen asks whether it’s time to rename the decade long regarded as Churchill’s ‘wilderness years’.
Richard Vinen - Croquet & Conspiracy
Richard Vinen: Croquet & Conspiracy - Churchill’s Citadel: Chartwell and the Gatherings Before the Storm by Katherine Carter
literaryreview.co.uk