June 2023 Issue Robert Colls Aristocracy of Labour An Uneasy Inheritance: My Family and Other Radicals By Polly Toynbee LR
December 2022 Issue Wendy Holden A Visit from the Editor The Owner’s Mother Loves My Stuff: A Journalist’s Life as I Know It By David Robson
October 2022 Issue James Campbell Sex, Drugs & Book Reviews Come Back in September: A Literary Education on West Sixty-Seventh Street, Manhattan By Darryl Pinckney LR
November 2019 Issue Martin Bell An Uncommon Correspondent Mr Straight Arrow: The Career of John Hersey, Author of Hiroshima By Jeremy Treglown
February 2019 Issue Roy Greenslade Making the Headlines Merchants of Truth: Inside the News Revolution By Jill Abramson LR
September 2018 Issue John Lloyd Editor with a Cause Breaking News: The Remaking of Journalism and Why It Matters Now By Alan Rusbridger
December 2017 Issue Robert Chesshyre Paper Trail Shouting in the Street: Adventures and Misadventures of a Fleet Street Survivor By Donald Trelford LR
June 1999 Issue Christopher Hitchens Despite Those Eyelashes, He Blew It Some Times in America By Alexander Chancellor
June 2017 Issue John Lloyd Despondent Correspondent War and the Death of News: Reflections of a Grade B Reporter By Martin Bell LR
October 1993 Issue Lynn Barber He Was Disgusted by a Steak Tartare Tricks of Memory By Peregrine Worsthorne LR
July 2016 Issue Dominic Green Critical Sensation Exhibitionist: Writing about Art in a Daily Newspaper By Richard Dorment LR
December 1990 Issue Elizabeth Imlay No Fun for Slaves Fanny Kemble: The American Journals By Fanny Kemble & Elizabeth Mavor (ed) LR
March 2008 Issue Mary Kenny Caught in the Crossfire Watching the Door: Cheating Death in 1970s Belfast By Kevin Myers LR
June 2012 Issue John Sweeney At War with Ceausescu Burying the Typewriter: Childhood Under the Eye of the Secret Police By Carmen Bugan 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
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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?
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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
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literaryreview.co.uk