From the November 2001 Issue He was Moral, but Was He Great? The Philosophy of Samuel Beckett By John Calder How it was: A Memoir of Samuel Beckett By Anne Atik LR
From the December 2015 Issue Critical Thinking The Prose Factory: Literary Life in England Since 1918 By D J Taylor LR
From the March 2003 Issue Austen’s Onion Becoming Jane Austen: A Life By Jon Spence Jane Austen's 'Outlandish Cousin': The Life and Letters of Eliza de Feuillide By Deirdre Le Faye LR
From the May 2003 Issue War Made Him Siegfried Sassoon: The Journey from the Trenches - A Biography (1918-1967) By Jean Moorcroft Wilson LR
From the August 2003 Issue Sons of Scotland Tobias Smollett By Jeremy Lewis Electric Shepard: A Likeness of James Hogg By Karl Miller LR
From the February 2004 Issue Less Is Moore The Poems of Marianne Moore By Edited by Grace Schulman LR
From the June 2004 Issue A Widower Writes Robert Browning: A Life After Death By Pamela Neville-Sington The Poetical Works of Robert Browning, Volume IX: The Ring and The Book, Books IX-XII By Stefan Hawlin, Tim Burnett (edd) LR
From the December 2004 Issue Writer & Co The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period By William St Clair LR
From the May 2009 Issue ‘These Fragments I Have Shored Against my Ruins’ Knossos and the Prophets of Modernism By Cathy Gere LR
From the November 2008 Issue Literary Lucubrations Reading Matters: Five Centuries of Discovering Books By Margaret Willes LR
From the July 2008 Issue It’s All Relative House of Wits: An Intimate Portrait of the James Family By Paul Fisher LR
From the August 2008 Issue Literary Legacies The Seven Lives of John Murray: The Story of a Publishing Dynasty By Humphrey Carpenter 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