From the September 2025 Issue Game of Floes Unfrozen: The Fight for the Future of the Arctic By Mia Bennett & Klaus Dodds LR
From the February 2025 Issue Mixed Signals House of Huawei: Inside the Secret World of China’s Most Powerful Company By Eva Dou
From the August 2024 Issue Who Will Rule the Waves? The Contest for the Indian Ocean and the Making of a New World Order By Darshana M Baruah LR
From the December 2023 Issue The View from the Ivory Towers Leadership: Lessons from a Life in Diplomacy By Simon McDonald LR
From the July 2023 Issue Et Tu, Rishi? Big Caesars and Little Caesars: How They Rise and How They Fall – From Julius Caesar to Boris Johnson By Ferdinand Mount LR
From the May 2023 Issue Tear Down These Peace Walls How to Fix Northern Ireland By Malachi O’Doherty LR
From the February 2023 Issue Quis Custodiet? Pegasus: How a Spy in Your Pocket Threatens the End of Privacy, Dignity, and Democracy By Laurent Richard & Sandrine Rigaud
From the October 2022 Issue Once Upon a Time in Ukraine Tales from the Borderlands: Making and Unmaking the Galician Past By Omer Bartov LR
From the May 2022 Issue Pirates of the Aegean Dead in the Water: Murder and Fraud in the World’s Most Secretive Industry By Matthew Campbell and Kit Chellel LR
From the December 2021 Issue Age of the Pangolin The Great Recoil: Politics after Populism and the Pandemic By Paolo Gerbaudo LR
From the July 2021 Issue Pedestal Pushers Fallen Idols: Twelve Statues That Made History By Alex von Tunzelmann
From the February 2021 Issue The Lies Have It The Assault on Truth: Boris Johnson, Donald Trump and the Emergence of a New Moral Barbarism By Peter Oborne LR
From the October 2020 Issue The View from Beijing Xi Jinping: The Backlash By Richard McGregor China’s Good War: How World War II is Shaping a New Nationalism By Rana Mitter
From the September 2020 Issue Beyond the Black Stuff The New Map: Energy, Climate and the Clash of Nations By Daniel Yergin LR
From the July 2020 Issue Out with Battleships, In with Bakeries Soft Power: The New Great Game By Robert Winder LR
From the February 2020 Issue Murder on the Mind From Russia with Blood: Putin’s Ruthless Killing Campaign and Secret War on the West By Heidi Blake LR
From the November 2019 Issue Taking Aim at Apartheid An Unwitting Assassin: The Story of my Father’s Attempted Assassination of Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd By Susie Cazenove LR
From the August 2019 Issue All the President’s Hitmen Surprise, Kill, Vanish: The Definitive History of Secret CIA Assassins, Armies & Operators By Annie Jacobsen LR
From the June 2019 Issue Imminent Return to Chaos & War The Rise and Fall of Peace on Earth By Michael Mandelbaum 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
Alfred, Lord Tennyson is practically a byword for old-fashioned Victorian grandeur, rarely pictured without a cravat and a serious beard.
Seamus Perry tries to picture him as a younger man.
Seamus Perry - Before the Beard
Seamus Perry: Before the Beard - The Boundless Deep: Young Tennyson, Science, and the Crisis of Belief by Richard Holmes
literaryreview.co.uk
Novelist Muriel Spark had a tongue that could produce both sugar and poison. It’s no surprise, then, that her letters make for a brilliant read.
@claire_harman considers some of the most entertaining.
Claire Harman - Fighting Words
Claire Harman: Fighting Words - The Letters of Muriel Spark, Volume 1: 1944-1963 by Dan Gunn
literaryreview.co.uk
Of all the articles I’ve published in recent years, this is *by far* my favourite.
✍️ On childhood, memory, and the sea - for @Lit_Review :
https://literaryreview.co.uk/flotsam-and-jetsam