June 2016 Issue Donald Rayfield Philosophers & Murderers Black Wind, White Snow: The Rise of Russia’s New Nationalism By Charles Clover A Very Expensive Poison: The Definitive Story of the Murder of Litvinenko and Russia’s War with the West By Luke Harding LR
June 2016 Issue Anna Reid Borderlands Veiled and Unveiled in Chechnya and Daghestan By Iwona Kaliszewska & Maciej Falkowski (Translated by Arthur Barys) LR
October 1983 Issue Christopher Hitchens Last, Best Hope The Making of the Second Cold War By Fred Halliday LR
May 2003 Issue Richard Overy Poisonous TImes Stalin's Last Crime: The Doctors' Plot By Jonathan Brent & Vladimir P Naumov LR
March 2008 Issue M R D Foot Silence at the Front The Greatest Day in History: How the Great War Really Ended By Nicholas Best LR
October 2007 Issue Donald Rayfield The Russian Dispossessed The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin’s Russia By Orlando Figes The Voices of the Dead: Stalin’s Great Terror in the 1930s By Hiroaki Kuromiya LR
December 2011 Issue Brendan Simms Dire Straits The Russian Origins of the First World War By Sean McMeekin LR
December 2011 Issue Christopher Andrew For Your Eyes Only Spies and Commissars: Bolshevik Russia and the West By Robert Service LR
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Princess Diana was adored and scorned, idolised, canonised and chastised.
Why, asks @NshShulman, was everyone mad about Diana?
Find out in the May issue of Literary Review, out now.
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Henry James returned to America in 1904 with three objectives: to see his brother William, to deliver a series of lectures on Balzac, and to gather material for a pair of books about modern America.
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