Book Reviews by subject:
Literature and Literary Criticism
- 11th Century
- 14th Century
- 16th Century
- 17th Century
- 18th Century
- 1920s
- 1930s
- 1950s
- 1980s
- 19th Century
- 20th Century
- 21st Century
- Afghanistan
- Africa
- Algeria
- Ancient Greece
- Ancient Rome
- Ancient World
- Anthologies
- Architecture & Engineering
- Art
- Australia
- Austro-Hungarian Empire
- Autobiography & Memoir
- Bible
- Bibliophiles
- Biography
- Bookends
- Bookselling
- Britain
- Bulgaria
- Caribbean
- Charles Dickens
- Children’s Literature
- China
- Christianity
- Classical Music
- Climate change
- Cold War
- Colonialism
- Communism
- Crime
- Cuba
- Cultural History
- Czech Republic
- D H Lawrence
- Diaries
- Diary
- Eastern Europe
- Education
- Edward Thomas
- Elizabethans
- Ernest Hemingway
- Essays
- Ethics & Morality
- Europe
- Feminism
- Fiction
- Film & Television
- Footprints
- France
- Franz Kafka
- French Revolution
- From the Pulpit
- George Orwell
- Germany
- Graham Greene
- Greece
- Group biography
- Henry James
- History
- History of Art
- History of a single year
- Holocaust
- Humour
- Imperialism
- India & the Subcontinent
- Internet
- Interview
- Interviews
- Iran
- Ireland
- Islam
- Italy
- James Joyce
- Jane Austen
- Japan
- Jean-Paul Sartre
- John Keats
- Journalism & Media
- Judaism and Jewishness
- Language & Linguistics
- Law
- Letter from...
- Letters
- Literary biography
- Literary life
- London
- Lord Byron
- Mao Zedong
- Marcel Proust
- Mark Twain
- Mary Shelley
- Medicine & Disease
- Medieval History
- Mediterranean Sea
- Meteorology
- Middle Ages
- Middle East
- Modernism
- Monarchy
- Music
- Myths & Folklore
- Nature writing
- Nazism
- Neuroscience
- Norway
- Oceans and Seas
- Orientalism
- Oscar Wilde
- Paris
- Philip Larkin
- Philosophy
- Photography
- Poetry
- Poland
- Political history
- Political theory
- Politics
- Psychoanalysis
- Psychogeography
- Psychology
- Publishing
- Reference
- Religion & Theology
- Renaissance
- Reviewing
- Romania
- Romantics
- Russia & the Soviet Union
- Saudi Arabia
- Scandinavia
- Science & Technology
- Science Fiction
- Scotland
- Second World War
- Sexuality and Gender
- Short Stories
- Short Story
- Sierra Leone
- Slavery
- Social history
- Socialism
- Sociology
- Spain
- Spanish Civil War
- Sport
- Sylvia Plath
- T S Eliot
- Ted Hughes
- The Beats
- Theatre
- Translation
- Travel & Reportage
- True Crime
- USA
- Venice
- Victorians
- Virginia Woolf
- Vladimir Nabokov
- W H Auden
- Wales
- William Shakespeare
- William Wordsworth
- Women
- 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
Twitter Feed
‘I have to change’, Miles Davis once said. ‘It’s like a curse.’
@rwilliams1947 tells the story of how Davis made jazz cool.
Richard Williams - In Their Own Sweet Way
Richard Williams: In Their Own Sweet Way - 3 Shades of Blue: Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Bill Evans and the Lo...
literaryreview.co.uk
The Political Unconscious: Narrative as a Socially Symbolic Act by Fredric Jameson - review by Terry Eagleton via @Lit_Review
for the new(ish) April issue of @Lit_Review I commissioned a number of pieces, including Deborah Levy on Bowie, Rosa Lyster on creative non-fiction, @JonSavage1966 on Pulp, @mjohnharrison on Oyamada, @rwilliams1947 on Kind of Blue, @chris_power on HGarner