Book Reviews by subject:
20th Century & 21st Century
- 17th Century
- 18th Century
- 19th Century
- Africa
- American Presidents
- Ancient World
- Architecture & Engineering
- Aristocracy
- Armenia
- Autobiography & Memoir
- Balkans
- Biography
- Britain
- British Prime Ministers
- Business & management
- Capitalism
- Celebrity culture
- China
- Cities
- Classical Music
- Communism
- Cultural History
- Diaries
- Economics
- Elizabethans
- Espionage
- Essays
- Ethics & Morality
- Feminism
- Film & Television
- Germany
- Global history
- Group biography
- History
- History of Science
- Hollywood
- Immigration
- Imperialism
- India & the Subcontinent
- International Relations
- Iran
- Iraq
- Islam
- Israel & Palestine
- Istanbul
- Italy
- Journalism & Media
- Literary biography
- Literary life
- Literature and Literary Criticism
- Medicine & Disease
- Mental health
- Middle East
- Military history
- Monarchy
- Music
- Ottoman Empire
- People's Republic of China
- Photography
- Poetry
- Political history
- Political theory
- Politics
- Pop Music
- Psychogeography
- Race
- Religion & Theology
- Russia & the Soviet Union
- Science & Technology
- Second World War
- Social history
- Sociology
- Terrorism
- The Troubles
- Tibet
- Travel & Reportage
- Turkey
- USA
- Uganda
- Vladimir Putin
- War on Terror
- Warfare
- Women's studies
- Writing
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Chuffed to be on the Curiosity Pill 2020 round-up for my @Lit_Review piece on swimming, which I cannot wait to get back to after 10+ months away https://literaryreview.co.uk/different-strokes https://twitter.com/RNGCrit/status/1351922254687383553
'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