October 2018 Issue Tom Fort Not Many Fish in the Sea Silver Shoals: Five Fish That Made Britain By Charles Rangeley-Wilson LR
August 2018 Issue Charles Foster Pod Casts Orca: How We Came to Know and Love the Ocean’s Greatest Predator By Jason M Colby Spying on Whales: The Past, Present and Future of the World’s Largest Animals By Nick Pyenson
August 2015 Issue Richard Kerridge The Great Thinning Rainbow Dust: Three Centuries of Delight in British Butterflies By Peter Marren The Moth Snowstorm: Nature and Joy By Michael McCarthy In Pursuit of Butterflies: A Fifty-Year Affair By Matthew Oates LR
October 2012 Issue Ronald Blythe A Year in the Life Wild Hares and Hummingbirds: The Natural History of an English Village By Stephen Moss LR
October 2012 Issue Philip Hoare Wild Things The Book of Barely Imagined Beings: A 21st Century Bestiary By Caspar Henderson LR
November 2012 Issue Esther Woolfson Nature Notes Otter Country: In Search of the Wild Otter By Miriam Darlington Nightwalk: A Journey to the Heart of Nature By Chris Yates LR
December 2012 Issue Colin Tudge Shake Your Tail Feathers Drawn from Paradise: The Discovery, Art and Natural History of the Birds of Paradise By David Attenborough & Errol Fuller LR
September 2013 Issue Caspar Henderson Fly Like a Bananaquit Birds and People By Mark Cocker (Photographs by David Tipling) LR
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Richard Flanagan's Question 7 is this year's winner of the @BGPrize.
In her review from our June issue, @rosalyster delves into Tasmania, nuclear physics, romance and Chekhov.
Rosa Lyster - Kiss of Death
Rosa Lyster: Kiss of Death - Question 7 by Richard Flanagan
literaryreview.co.uk
‘At times, Orbital feels almost like a long poem.’
@sam3reynolds on Samantha Harvey’s Orbital, the winner of this year’s @TheBookerPrizes
Sam Reynolds - Islands in the Sky
Sam Reynolds: Islands in the Sky - Orbital by Samantha Harvey
literaryreview.co.uk
Nick Harkaway, John le Carré's son, has gone back to the 1960s with a new novel featuring his father's anti-hero, George Smiley.
But is this the missing link in le Carré’s oeuvre, asks @ddguttenplan, or is there something awry?
D D Guttenplan - Smiley Redux
D D Guttenplan: Smiley Redux - Karla’s Choice by Nick Harkaway
literaryreview.co.uk