Book Reviews by subject:
20th Century & Russia & the Soviet Union
- 1920s
- 1930s
- 1950s
- 1980s
- 19th Century
- 21st Century
- Adolf Hitler
- Anthologies
- Architecture & Engineering
- Aristocracy
- Art
- Atomic Power
- Austria
- Autobiography & Memoir
- Aviation
- Ballet
- Belarus
- Biography
- Britain
- Cities
- Classical Music
- Cold War
- Communism
- Crime
- Cultural History
- Czech Republic
- Dance
- Democracy
- Diaries
- Diplomacy
- Eastern Europe
- Espionage
- Ethics & Morality
- Europe
- Exploration
- Fashion
- First World War
- France
- Geography
- Germany
- Global history
- Group biography
- History
- History of Art
- History of Ideas
- History of Science
- History of a single year
- Human Rights
- Hungary
- Impressionism & Post-Impressionism
- International Relations
- Interviews
- John Maynard Keynes
- Joseph Stalin
- Journalism & Media
- Judaism and Jewishness
- Letters
- Literary biography
- Literary life
- Literature and Literary Criticism
- Marcel Proust
- Margaret Thatcher
- Mental health
- Military history
- Modernism
- Monarchy
- Music
- Nationalism
- Nazism
- New Zealand
- Paris
- Poetry
- Poland
- Political history
- Politics
- Postwar history
- Science & Technology
- Second World War
- Social history
- Southeast Asia
- Space
- Travel & Reportage
- USA
- Ukraine
- Vladimir Lenin
- Vladimir Nabokov
- Vladimir Putin
- Warfare
- Winston Churchill
- Women in history
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
'The trouble seems to be that we are not asked to read this author, reading being a thing of the past. We are asked to decode him.'
From the archive, Derek Mahon peruses the early short fiction of Thomas Pynchon.
https://literaryreview.co.uk/rock-n-roll-is-here-to-stay
'There are at least two dozen members of the House of Commons today whose names I cannot read without laughing because I know what poseurs and place-seekers they are.'
From the archive, Christopher Hitchens on the Oxford Union.
https://literaryreview.co.uk/mother-of-unions
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