From the October 2018 Issue Fakir News Empire of Enchantment: The Story of Indian Magic By John Zubrzycki LR
From the June 2018 Issue Trip Advisors How to Change Your Mind: Exploring the New Science of Psychedelics By Michael Pollan
From the June 1998 Issue New Literary Form Was Not Writing but Typing Jack Kerouac: King of The Beats - A Portrait By Barry Miles LR
From the October 2016 Issue Last Dance in Lhasa Tibet in Agony: Lhasa 1959 By Jianglin Li (Translated by Susan Wilf) LR
From the February 2015 Issue Household Deities The Living Goddess: A Journey into the Heart of Kathmandu By Isabella Tree LR
From the April 2011 Issue Spiritual High Memoirs of a Dervish: Sufis, Mystics and The Sixties By Robert Irwin LR
From the October 2006 Issue American Grotesque The Joke's Over: Memories of Hunter S Thompson By Ralph Steadman LR
From the June 2013 Issue Zen & Now From Stone to Flesh: A Short History of the Buddha By Donald S Lopez Jr LR
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'The authors do not shrink from spelling out the scale of the killings when the Rhodesians made long-distance raids on guerrilla camps in Mozambique and Zambia.'
Xan Smiley on how Rhodesia became Zimbabwe.
https://literaryreview.co.uk/what-the-secret-agent-saw
'Thirkell was a product of her time and her class. For her there are no sacred cows, barring those that win ribbons at the Barchester Agricultural.'
The novelist Angela Thirkell is due a revival, says Patricia T O'Conner (£).
https://literaryreview.co.uk/good-gad
'Only in Britain, perhaps, could spy chiefs – conventionally viewed as masters of subterfuge – be so highly regarded as ethical guides.'
https://literaryreview.co.uk/the-spy-who-taught-me