October 2023 Issue Sue Prideaux The Road to Giverny Monet: The Restless Vision By Jackie Wullschläger
July 1995 Issue Winston Fletcher Sad Genius Who Missed His Children Dreadfully Paul Gauguin: A Complete Life By David Sweetman LR
March 2018 Issue Tom Stammers Mixed Impressions Renoir: An Intimate Biography By Barbara Ehrlich White
December 1999 Issue Lynn Barber Out of the Snake Pit The Sorcerer’s Apprentice: Picasso, Provence and Douglas Cooper By John Richardson LR
September 2016 Issue Lucy Lethbridge Last Light Mad Enchantment: Claude Monet and the Painting of the Water Lilies By Ross King LR
June 1990 Issue Anne Clark Amor Badly Soiled in the Struggle for Life The Love of Many Things: A Life of Vincent Van Gogh By David Sweetman LR
July 1988 Issue Richard Dorment A Monster Who Used Women Picasso: Creator and Destroyer By Arianna Stassinopoulos Huffington LR
August 2014 Issue Alex Danchev Band of Bohemians In Montmartre: Picasso, Matisse and Modernism in Paris 1900–1910 By Sue Roe LR
December 2007 Issue John McEwen I am God, I am God A Life of Picasso: Volume III – The Triumphant Years, 1917–1932 By John Richardson (with the collaboration of Marilyn McCully) LR
July 2006 Issue Henrietta Garnett A Palette of Painters The Private Lives of the Impressionists By Sue Roe LR
December 2011 Issue Michael Peppiatt All About Vincent Van Gogh: The Life By Steven Naifeh & Gregory White Smith LR
May 2013 Issue Kevin Jackson We Need to Talk about Pablo Picasso and Truth: From Cubism to Guernica By T J Clark LR
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Priests have blessed armies and weapons, and sanctioned executions and massacres, but never so widely as in Putin’s Russia.
Donald Rayfield on the history of Russian Orthodoxy.
Donald Rayfield - Clerics & Crooks
Donald Rayfield: Clerics & Crooks - The Baton and the Cross: Russia’s Church from Pagans to Putin by Lucy Ash
literaryreview.co.uk
Are children being burned out by endless exams? Or does rising inequality lie behind the mental health crisis in young people today?
@Samfr investigates.
Sam Freedman - The Kids Aren’t Alright
Sam Freedman: The Kids Aren’t Alright - Seven Children: Inequality and Britain’s Next Generation by Danny Dorling;...
literaryreview.co.uk
Augustus the Strong’s name has long been a byword for dissipation. Yet he was also a great patron of the arts, creating in Dresden perhaps the finest Baroque city in Europe.
Ritchie Robertson examines the two sides of his personality.
Ritchie Robertson - All for the Thrill of the Chase
Ritchie Robertson: All for the Thrill of the Chase - Augustus the Strong: A Study in Artistic Greatness and Political Fiasco by Tim Blanning
literaryreview.co.uk