From the December 2021 Issue Into That Good Night The Lighted Window: Evening Walks Remembered By Peter Davidson
From the December 2020 Issue He Knew All of Shakespeare by Heart Take Arms Against a Sea of Troubles: The Power of the Reader’s Mind over a Universe of Death By Harold Bloom LR
From the April 2020 Issue Force of Nature Radical Wordsworth: The Poet Who Changed the World By Jonathan Bate
From the November 2018 Issue Hilltop Thoughts O Joy for me! Samuel Taylor Coleridge & the Origins of Fell-walking in the Lake District, 1790–1802 By Keir Davidson LR
From the November 2016 Issue Thrill of the Chase This Long Pursuit: Reflections of a Romantic Biographer By Richard Holmes LR
From the July 2016 Issue What Lies Beneath Housman Country: Into the Heart of England By Peter Parker
From the September 2015 Issue Taking the Temperature Weatherland: Writers and Artists under English Skies By Alexandra Harris
From the June 2015 Issue Read or Dead Those Who Write for Immortality: Romantic Reputations and the Dream of Lasting Fame By H J Jackson LR
From the February 2015 Issue Possum Emerges Young Eliot: From St Louis to The Waste Land By Robert Crawford The Letters of T S Eliot: Volume 5, 1930–1931 By Valerie Eliot & John Haffenden (edd)
From the November 2014 Issue Eat, Drink & Be Merry The Immortal Evening: A Legendary Dinner with Keats, Wordsworth, and Lamb By Stanley Plumly LR
From the August 2014 Issue Treasure Seekers A Strange Business: Making Art and Money in Nineteenth-Century Britain By James Hamilton LR
From the December 2012 Issue Laureate of Melancholy Tennyson: To Strive, To Seek, To Find By John Batchelor 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: ...
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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