From handwritten first drafts and (extensively) rewritten editorial spreads to reader complaints and iconic cover artwork - via the personal notebooks and correspondence in which publishing triumphs and disasters played out - this patchwork history brings a unique slice of Bloomsbury's modern heritage to life. With new introductions by Mary-Kay Wilmers and editor-at-large Andrew O'Hagan - and other famous protagonists from the paper's past and present - this is the perfect celebration of the LRB's last forty years. Featuring legendary authors (such as Angela Carter, Bruce Chatwin, Seamus Heaney, Christopher Hitchens, Doris Lessing, Oliver Sacks, Edward Said, and Susan Sontag) alongside heroic letter-writers unlikely contributors (Tony Blair, believe it or not), this magnificent full-color hardback is a must-have for literature lovers everywhere.
Abortion Rights is the only grassroots pro-choice campaign in Britain, working for safe, free, legal and accessible abortion. Join today!
Looking for some Sunday reading? The latest issue of the London Review of Books includes a collection of thoughtful responses to the overturning of Roe v Wade. Read for free here: https://t.co/yJ90hvRcl9
Publishing incomparable storytellers and award-winning fiction and nonfiction since 1866. Includes Metropolitan Books and Andy Cohen Books.
The London Review of Books (@LRB) calls @MetropolitanBks title, IN THE MIDST OF CIVILIZED EUROPE by @Veidlinger "A riveting and nuanced account..." Look out for paperback copies in September, and in the meantime, read the rest of the review here: http://ow.ly/yR6M50JW1mp
AW Mellon fellow @the_IAS, 2022-23 | Asst. Prof. History @UHVictoria | Writes on pedagogy, pop culture, medieval law | mastodon: EstherLCuenca@toot.community
Reading @tomlukejohnson’s new piece / review on the history of paper in The London Review of Books on Venice Beach. https://t.co/R4tKuxymZf