From the June 2015 Issue Dirt & Glory The Street of Wonderful Possibilities: Whistler, Wilde & Sargent in Tite Street By Devon Cox LR
From the November 2014 Issue Lines of Beauty George Frederick Bodley and the Later Gothic Revival in Britain and America By Michael Hall LR
From the February 2006 Issue The Lino of Beauty The Inward Laugh: Edward Bawden and his Circle By Malcolm Yorke LR
From the July 2012 Issue Wearing Warhol Textile Design: Artists’ Textiles 1940–1976 By Geoffrey Rayner, Richard Chamberlain & Annamarie Stapleton LR
From the April 2005 Issue Furnishing A Utopia International Arts and Crafts By Karen Livingstone and Linda Parry (ed) Phillip Webb: Pioneer of the Arts & Crafts Architecture By Shelia Kirk An Anthology of the Arts and Crafts Movement By Mary Greensted LR
From the November 2012 Issue Cast Master The Sculpture of F E McWilliam By Denise Ferran & Valerie Holman LR
From the May 2013 Issue Figuring It Out The Sculpture of Charles Wheeler By Sarah Crellin Elisabeth Frink: Catalogue Raisonné of Sculpture 1947–93 By Annette Ratuszniak (ed) 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