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{{newreview
|author= Gill Blanchard
|title= Lawson Lies Still in the Thames: The Extraordinary Life of Vice-Admiral Sir John Lawson
|rating=4.5
|genre=Biography
|summary=Twice within three centuries, England was convulsed by internal armed struggle. During the Lancastrian-Yorkist hostilities, several powerful figures changed sides at least once. Two hundred years later, when the roundheads and cavaliers were at odds, it was not uncommon for some of their protagonists to do likewise. This book tells the life of one of the major Stuart era changelings, one who as the author says played a pivotal role in the death throes of the republican cause for which he fought hard over seventeen years.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1445661233</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author= Lyndal Roper
|summary= In ''A Passing Fury,'' we follow an Orwell Prize-winning law academic's journey through Germany as he pursues the legal history of the trials waged by the British, and to some extent other Allied forces, against the newly-fallen Nazi regime. This is a deeply personal account, that reads very much like a travelogue in places. Williams is affected at every turn by harrowingly familiar accounts of life in the concentration camp system, such as those of the esteemed Italian writer and academic Primo Levi, who features throughout the book. More striking to the reader, however, are the often-forgotten atrocities Williams describes that failed to make a mark on our collective memory, such as the Cap Arcona tragedy, in which some 7,000 concentration camp internees were killed in a British air raid. Horrors such as these, which largely go unremembered, raise many questions, chief among them, was justice served? Williams pursues answers to this question throughout his investigation, which is just shy of 500 pages long.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099593262</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author= Jane Harper
|title= The Dry
|rating= 5
|genre= Crime
|summary= Sometimes a book takes a while to get into. Sometimes it's quicker than that. If Harper hadn't grabbed me in the first paragraph, she certainly had half-way down the second page: ''So nothing reacted when deep inside the house, the baby started crying.''
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0349142114</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview <!-- remove 5/6 -->