From the April 2024 Issue
Jailed for Being Disabled
The Undesirables: The Law that Locked Away a Generation
By Sarah Wise
LR
From the October 2023 Issue
Embarrassment & Riches
Astor: The Rise and Fall of an American Fortune
By Anderson Cooper & Katherine Howe
LR
From the September 2023 Issue
Writers with a Cause
Penning Poison: A History of Anonymous Letters
By Emily Cockayne
LR
From the September 2022 Issue
Appointments with Death
The Man Who Invented Motion Pictures: A True Tale of Obsession, Murder, and the Movies
By Paul Fischer
The Killing of Lord George: A Tale of Murder and Deceit in Edwardian England
By Karl Shaw
Who Killed Jane Stanford? A Gilded-Age Tale of Murder, Deceit, Spirits, and the Birth of a University
By Richard White
LR
From the June 2021 Issue
Sherlock Investigates
The Mystery of the Parsee Lawyer: Arthur Conan Doyle, George Edalji and the Case of the Foreigner in the English Village
By Shrabani Basu
LR
From the July 2020 Issue
Out for a Hundred
One Long and Beautiful Summer: A Short Elegy for Red-Ball Cricket
By Duncan Hamilton
That Will Be England Gone: The Last Summer of Cricket
By Michael Henderson
LR
From the February 2020 Issue
Jail Broke
A Bit of a Stretch: The Diaries of a Prisoner
By Chris Atkins
LR
From the September 2019 Issue
Judge, Jury & Executioner
Court Number One: The Old Bailey Trials That Defined Modern Britain
By Thomas Grant
LR
From the August 2019 Issue
He Pushed the Boundary
From the March 2019 Issue
The Woman Who Wouldn’t be Queen
Untitled: The Real Wallis Simpson, Duchess of Windsor
By Anna Pasternak
LR
From the November 2018 Issue
Stock Horror
Ultimate Folly: The Rises and Falls of Whitaker Wright, the World’s Most Shameless Swindler
By Henry Macrory
LR
From the July 2018 Issue
Fit-Up Most Foul
Conan Doyle for the Defence: A Sensational Murder, the Quest for Justice and the World’s Greatest Detective Writer
By Margalit Fox
LR
From the May 2018 Issue
Joined at the Liver
Inseparable: The Original Siamese Twins and Their Rendezvous with American History
By Yunte Huang
LR
From the March 2018 Issue
Court in the Crossfire
The Secret Barrister: Stories of the Law and How It’s Broken
By The Secret Barrister
LR
From the February 2018 Issue
Papists’ Progress
The Keys and the Kingdom: The British and the Papacy from John Paul II to Francis
By Catherine Pepinster
LR
From the April 2017 Issue
Writing Wrongs
Ludo and the Power of the Book: Ludovic Kennedy’s Campaigns for Justice
By Richard Ingrams
LR
From the August 2016 Issue
Cross Talk
That Was the Church, That Was: How the Church of England
By Andrew Brown & Linda Woodhead
LR
From the June 2016 Issue
Killer Headlines
We’ll All Be Murdered in Our Beds! The Shocking History of Crime Reporting in Britain
By Duncan Campbell
LR
From the May 2016 Issue
Teenage Kicks
The Wicked Boy: The Mystery of a Victorian Child Murderer
By Kate Summerscale
LR
From the March 2016 Issue
Arsenic in the Curry
The Secret Poisoner: A Century of Murder
By Linda Stratmann
LR
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In just thirteen years, George Villiers rose from plain squire to become the only duke in England and the most powerful politician in the land. Does a new biography finally unravel the secrets of his success?
John Adamson investigates.
John Adamson - Love Island with Ruffs
John Adamson: Love Island with Ruffs - The Scapegoat: The Brilliant Brief Life of the Duke of Buckingham by Lucy Hughes-Hallett
literaryreview.co.uk
During the 1930s, Winston Churchill retired to Chartwell, his Tudor-style country house in Kent, where he plotted a return to power.
Richard Vinen asks whether it’s time to rename the decade long regarded as Churchill’s ‘wilderness years’.
Richard Vinen - Croquet & Conspiracy
Richard Vinen: Croquet & Conspiracy - Churchill’s Citadel: Chartwell and the Gatherings Before the Storm by Katherine Carter
literaryreview.co.uk