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    The description :in the current issue: john stubbs on shakespeare's tyrants * richard cockett on election-rigging * darrin mcmahon on thomas paine * henrietta garnett on feminism's fight with feathers * keshava guha o...

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literary review for people who devour books -- -- -- -- here: h5bp.com/d/head-tips -- your browser is ancient! upgrade to a different browser or install google chrome frame to experience this site. for people who devour books subscribe today! -- subscribe today! sign in register help literary review tuesday 12th june, 2018 home current issue archive bad sex search subscribe about et cetera the current issue march 2012 issue - out now in this issue: john gray on tony judt’s thinking the twentieth century • elaine showalter on the first pop age • donald rayfield on belarus • praveen swami on sharia law • a c grayling: what are universities for? • the letters of joseph roth • jane ridley on the queen • seamus perry on the poetry of translation • jonathan fenby on mao • richard holloway on religion for atheists • john sutherland on growing old • frances wilson on cruelty and laughter and much, much more… -- june 2018 view contents table subscribe ‘this magazine is flush with tight, smart writing.’ washington post literary review covers the most important and interesting books published each month, from history and biography to fiction and travel. the magazine was founded in 1979 and is based in london. ‘this magazine is flush with tight, smart writing.’ washington post literary review covers the most important and interesting books published each month, from history and biography to fiction and travel. the magazine was founded in 1979 and is based in london. -- highlights from the current issue -- june 2018, issue 465 john stubbs on shakespeare's tyrants * richard cockett on election-rigging * darrin mcmahon on thomas paine * henrietta garnett on feminism's fight with feathers * keshava guha on dalits * paul willetts on a shanghai noir * avi shilon on benjamin netanyahu * salley vickers on a new translation of the new testament * mick brown on psychedelics * blair worden on civility * christopher hart on samuel johnson's guide to life * d d guttenplan on seymour hersh * ben masters on michael ondaatje * patrick scrivenor on the yeti * sarah crown on rachel kushner * and much, much more… john stubbs tyrant: shakespeare on power by stephen greenblatt stephen greenblatt’s ardent and involving new book is concerned with rulers and aspirants in shakespeare who abuse their power. it draws attention to a very wide range of characters. there are the out-and-out villains, best typified by richard iii, the nonpareil power-grabber, king lear’s sadistic and vindictive daughters goneril and regan and the rather more crudely drawn butchers of titus andronicus. but then there are more complex, puzzling figures. there is lear himself, the king turned fool, unleashing chaos in his realm for the sake of an egoistic game of who loves me most? there is the curiously ineffectual coriolanus, who marches back and forth between cities in a perpetual strop... read more more articles from this issue salley vickers the new testament: a translation by david bentley hart david bentley hart is an eastern orthodox theologian who has made waves in his own sphere through his radical atavism (he refers often to the early church fathers’ concept of the divine), his sympathy for and grasp of the languages and cultures of the ancient world and his unsqueamish, ferocious attacks on modern atheism. perhaps more relevant to this readership... read more d avid bentley hart is an eastern orthodox theologian who has made waves in his own sphere through his radical atavism (he refers often to the early church fathers’ concept of the divine), his sympathy for and grasp of the languages and cultures of the ancient world and his unsqueamish, ferocious attacks on modern atheism. perhaps more relevant to this readership, he writes acute and vivacious prose that betrays a thoroughgoing knowledge of literature, both secular and sacred. this is worth bearing in mind when considering his latest and, to date, boldest project: a fresh translation of the books of the new testament. -- -- mick brown how to change your mind: exploring the new science of psychedelics by michael pollan for better or worse, albert hofmann has a lot to answer for. it was hofmann, a chemist working for sandoz laboratories in switzerland, who in 1943, in search of a respiratory and circulatory stimulant, inadvertently hit upon a substance called lysergic acid diethylamide, or lsd. accidentally ingesting some of the substance...  read more f or better or worse, albert hofmann has a lot to answer for. it was hofmann, a chemist working for sandoz laboratories in switzerland, who in 1943, in search of a respiratory and circulatory stimulant, inadvertently hit upon a substance called lysergic acid diethylamide, or lsd. accidentally ingesting some of the substance, hofmann found himself overcome by ‘an uninterrupted stream of fantastic pictures, extraordinary shapes with intense, kaleidoscopic play of colors’. this was the world’s first acid trip. it was hofmann, too, who in 1958 isolated psilocybin, the ingredient found in several species of ‘magic mushrooms’ from latin america. these had long been used in shamanic rituals, but hofmann’s breakthrough allowed psilocybin to be easily prepared in the laboratory for clinicians and psychiatrists to use in ‘psychedelic therapy’. -- -- matthew engel trans-europe express: tours of a lost continent by owen hatherley in 2006 the football world cup was held in germany and, in line with common practice, accredited personnel – journalists included – received free travel passes, in this case, first-class on german railways. it was not just a perk: many of us were travelling from one game to another, one city to another, almost every day. colleagues would meet up in those wonderfully...  read more in 2006 the football world cup was held in germany and, in line with common practice, accredited personnel – journalists included – received free travel passes, in this case, first-class on german railways. it was not just a perk: many of us were travelling from one game to another, one city to another, almost every day. colleagues would meet up in those wonderfully old-fashioned (to british eyes) semi-private train compartments and chat, presumably about the football and the iniquities of subeditors, conversations that have not stuck in the memory. what i do remember is this: day after day another subject would also recur. good god, we kept saying, aren’t these german cities beautiful? who knew? sure, i had camped in the black forest and reported from berlin as the wall came down. but now we were travelling to places that in my generation’s mind conjured up only nazi rants and the drone of bombers: hamburg, hanover, stuttgart, dortmund. everywhere, the old buildings that survived had been lovingly conserved. the new ones were tasteful and in scale. the local transport worked. the streets were clean. myself, i never made it to nuremberg, the most chilling name of all, but those who did go said it was the best of the lot. why wasn’t britain like this? -- -- james hamilton rodin and the art of ancient greece by celeste farge, bénédicte garnier & ian jenkins auguste rodin ‘haunted’ (his word) the british museum from the first of his many visits to london in 1881. he was aged forty-one, and already a lauded and successful sculptor, highly attuned to the power and beauty of ancient greek art. this fine book is published to coincide with the exhibition ‘rodin and the art of ancient greece’ at the british museum, which has...  read more a uguste rodin ‘haunted’ (his word) the british museum from the first of his many visits to london in 1881. he was aged forty-one, and already a lauded and successful sculptor, highly attuned to the power and beauty of ancient greek art. this fine book is published to coincide with the exhibition ‘rodin and the art of ancient greece’ at the british museum, which has brought together rodin’s sculpture and greek art in a monumental show of force, clearly demonstrating the purpose of museums to all who may be unsure. -- -- avi shilon bibi: the turbulent life and times of benjamin netanyahu by anshel pfeffer the temptation to write a biography of benjamin netanyahu, who has served as prime minister of israel for twelve years and continues to be preferred by many israelis over other possible candidates for the job, is great. like menachem begin, the founding father of the likud party and israel’s first right-wing prime minister, netanyahu arouses fierce...  read more the temptation to write a biography of benjamin netanyahu, who has served as prime minister of israel for twelve years and continues to be preferred by many israelis over other possible candidates for the job, is great. like menachem begin, the founding father of the likud party and israel’s first right-wing prime minister, netanyahu arouses fierce and contradictory emotions. supporters view him as a leader who has transformed israel into a regional power with a thriving economy, enjoying relative security against the backdrop of a tempestuous middle east. opponents argue that he is fostering the rise of chauvinistic nationalism in israel, neglecting the diplomatic and moral need to resolve the palestinian issue and, above all, splitting israeli society with his divisive rhetoric. the netanyahu puzzle demands a solution. -- -- sarah crown the mars room by rachel kushner what does it mean to be a prisoner in the land of the free? this is the question rachel kushner asks us to consider in her third novel, the mars room, a bleak and bitter interrogation of the socioeconomic structures, invisible but tyrannical, that regulate contemporary america. the belief that everyone born under the stars and stripes has the freedom to choose their own path underpins the american dream. but through the story of romy hall...  read more w hat does it mean to be a prisoner in the land of the free? this is the question rachel kushner asks us to consider in her third novel, the mars room , a bleak and bitter interrogation of the socioeconomic structures, invisible but tyrannical, that regulate contemporary america. the belief that everyone born under the stars and stripes has the freedom to choose their own path underpins the american dream. but through the story of romy hall, a sometime lap dancer and single mother serving out two consecutive life sentences in the dust and heat of stanville women’s correctional facility in california , kushner effectively dismantles the notion. she shows that for a whole stratum of society, choice is not only an illusion, but also one that is turned back on them, a tool employed to subjugate them further. ‘ms hall, i know it’s tough,’ says a prison counsellor, defending the decision to refuse to tell romy where her son is, following the news that romy’s mother – who is also the boy’s guardian – has been killed in a car accident, ‘but your situation is due one hundred percent to the choices you made … if you’d wanted to be a responsible parent, you would have made different choices.’ -- -- literary review “easily the best book magazine currently available” john carey “easily the best book magazine currently available” john carey -- subscribe today! most read more salley vickers the new testament: a translation by david bentley hart may 30, 2018 by david gelber -- john stubbs tyrant: shakespeare on power by stephen greenblatt may 29, 2018 by tom fleming -- avi shilon bibi: the turbulent life and times of benjamin netanyahu by anshel pfeffer may 29, 2018 by tom fleming -- john gray at the existentialist café: freedom, being and apricot cocktails by sarah bakewell february 22, 2016 by tom fleming -- jonathan beckman hours of pleasure from the archives more from the may 1988 issue hilary mantel time with children: stories by elizabeth tallent from the may 1988 issue david sexton rock star by jackie collins from the may 1988 issue paul richardson the art of the novel by milan kundera back issues more may 2018 april 2018 march 2018 e r -- i t f sign up to our newsletter receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more. sign up @lit_review follow literary review on twitter last tweets 'rodin’s fascination with ancient greek sculpture is part of a long and distinguished french tradition.' a review o… https://t.co/ewopskcavo , 14 hours ago the new testament, in a new translation by david bentley hart, reviewed by salley vickers https://t.co/hme65npr0t , jun 11 this issue's crime roundup by @mannjessica includes works by georges simenon, jack grimwood, @charlescumming , ps… https://t.co/mwxtm2qxb7 , jun 9 'bibi': a new biography of netanyahu by @anshelpfeffer , reviewed by avi shilon https://t.co/qabfojqwjv , jun 8 john stubbs on stephen greenblatt's 'tyrant': https://t.co/fercqh7wzo , jun 7 shakespeare & tyrants, india’s untouchables, rodin goes greek & more - https://t.co/lrgoscdwa6 , jun 6 rt @djtaylorwriter : hats off to ian critchley @iancritchley who on the evidence of this month's @lit_review clearly knows his onions #rockandrollislife , jun 6 follow us literary review home about current issue bad sex search subscribe archive contact et cetera advertising e i t f privacy policy cookies policy designed and built by sam oakley ')

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