From the March 2026 Issue All at Sea Lifeboat at the End of the World: A Volunteer’s Story By Dominic Gregory LR
From the October 2025 Issue Hook, Line & Sinker Every Last Fish: What Fish Do for Us and What We Do to Them By Rose George LR
From the August 2025 Issue Lies of the Land Uncommon Ground: Rethinking Our Relationship with the Countryside By Patrick Galbraith LR
From the April 2024 Issue Shrub Crawl Hedgelands: A Wild Wander around Britain’s Greatest Habitat By Christopher Hart, with Jonathan Thomson LR
From the June 2021 Issue Hooked for Life The Lightning Thread: Fishological Moments and the Pursuit of Paradise By David Profumo LR
From the October 2020 Issue A Slippery Customer The Gospel of the Eels: A Father, a Son and the World’s Most Enigmatic Fish By Patrik Svensson (Translated from Swedish by Agnes Broomé) LR
From the December 2019 Issue They Don’t Even Have Smartphones Incredible Journeys: Exploring the Wonders of Animal Navigation By David Barrie LR
From the May 2019 Issue Roadkill & Camomile for Tea The Way Home: Tales from a Life Without Technology By Mark Boyle LR
From the October 2018 Issue Not Many Fish in the Sea Silver Shoals: Five Fish That Made Britain By Charles Rangeley-Wilson LR
From the May 2018 Issue Troubled Waters Kings of the Yukon: An Alaskan River Journey By Adam Weymouth LR
From the April 2018 Issue How Grey Was My Valley Our Place: Can We Save Britain's Wildlife Before It Is Too Late? By Mark Cocker LR
From the November 2017 Issue A Rock to Call Home Islander: A Journey Around Our Archipelago By Patrick Barkham LR
From the August 2017 Issue Farm & Fortune Land of Plenty: A Journey Through the Fields & Foods of Modern Britain By Charlie Pye-Smith LR
From the July 2017 Issue Busman’s Holiday Riding Route 94: An Accidental Journey through the Story of Britain By David McKie LR
From the February 2017 Issue Fish out of Water The Man Who Ate the Zoo: Frank Buckland, Forgotten Hero of Natural History By Richard Girling LR
From the September 2016 Issue Current Affairs Estuary: Out from London to the Sea By Rachel Lichtenstein LR
From the June 2016 Issue What Goes Out Must Come In The Swordfish and the Star: Life on Cornwall’s Most Treacherous Stretch of Coast By Gavin Knight Tide: The Science and Lore of the Greatest Force on Earth By Hugh Aldersey-Williams LR
From the December 2015 Issue The Axeman Cometh Norwegian Wood: Chopping, Stacking, and Drying Wood the Scandinavian Way By Lars Mytting LR
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With an eye for spectacle and a penchant for an actress in a crinoline, Napoleon III has been dismissed as an embarrassing failure.
Jonathan Keates wonders if he was a calculating opportunist or a forgotten visionary.
Jonathan Keates - Taller with the Charm On
Jonathan Keates: Taller with the Charm On - The People’s Emperor: The Unlikely Rise and Spectacular Fall of Napoleon III by Edward Shawcross
literaryreview.co.uk
Hot off the press in the latest @Lit_Review: my review of Tim Whitmarsh's book on the origins of Christianity and the Age of Augustus. (TLDR: it's well worth a read.)
My review of Jack Watling's powerful tour d'horizon of geopolitics today in @Lit_Review. Jack feels strongly but writes with cool restraint:
Patrick Porter - Putting the Grand Back in Strategy
Patrick Porter: Putting the Grand Back in Strategy - Statecraft: The New Rules of Power in a Divided World by Jack Watling
literaryreview.co.uk