Difference between revisions of "Newest Biography Reviews"

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[[Category:Biography|*]]
 
[[Category:Biography|*]]
[[Category:New Reviews|Biography]]
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[[Category:New Reviews|Biography]]__NOTOC__<!-- INSERT NEW REVIEWS BELOW HERE-->
==Biography==
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{{Frontpage
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|author=Claire Dederer
{{newreview
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|title=Monsters: What Do We Do with Great Art by Bad People?
|author=Sara Turing
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|rating=3
|title=Alan M Turing: Centenary Edition
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|genre=Politics and Society
|rating=4
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|summary=Dederer sets out to unveil what she calls a ''biography of the audience'' in a deconstructed, thoroughly nitpicked, exploration of the old aphorism of separating the art from the artist in the context of contemporary ''cancel culture''. Dederer's work is original and expressive. The reader gets the impression that the thoughts simply sprang and leapt from her brilliant mind and onto the page. In particular, the prologue packs a punch: she simultaneously condemns and exalts the director Roman Polanski, an artist she personally admires for his art, and yet despises for his actions. This model of ''monstrous men'' as she calls them, is consistent for the first few chapters, interrogating the likes of Woody Allen, Michael Jackson and Pablo Picasso. Her critical voice is acutely present throughout, never slipping into anonymity and maintaining her own subjectivity, as she holds it so dearly, and a personal, rather than collective voice.
|genre=Biography
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|isbn=1399715070
|summary=June 2012 will see the centenary of the birth of Alan Turing, brilliant mathematician, the man who played a major part in breaking the Enigma codes in the Second World War and is widely thought to be the father of computer science. To celebrate the anniversary Cambridge University Press have reprinted a short biography written by Turing's mother and included a memoir written by his older brother, John. I'm rarely impressed by biographies written by [[No Ordinary Man by Dominic Carman|family members]] particularly when they're still coming to terms with their own grief, but this book is startling for what it says about the family members as much as for what it says about Alan Turing.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1107020581</amazonuk>
 
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1788360702
|author=Sally E Svenson
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|title=Charles, The Alternative Prince: An Unauthorised Biography
|title=Lily, Duchess of Marlborough (1854 - 1909): A Portrait with Husbands
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|author=Edzard Ernst
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=The woman we will eventually come to know as Lily, Duchess of Marlborough was born Eliza Warren Price in Troy, New York in 1854.  Her father hailed from Bluegrass Country in Kentucky and met his future wife (who was from Troy) in Washington DC.  The family was comfortably off (but not rich) and became part of the Troy's social elite when they returned to live thereLily (as she became known) had an unremarkable childhood and youth but became wealthy though her marriage to Louis Hammersley, who died when she was twenty eight and left her a wealthy widow.  His will would leave her legal problems which would simmer all her life and even after her own death twenty one years and two more husbands later.
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|summary=For over forty years, Prince Charles has been an ardent supporter of alternative medicine and complementary therapies''Charles, The Alternative Prince'' critically assesses the Prince's opinions, beliefs and aims against the background of the scientific evidenceThere are few instances of his beliefs being vindicated and his relentless promotion of treatments which have no scientific support has done considerable damage to the reputation of a man who is proud of his refusal to apply evidence-based, logical reasoning to his ambitions.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1457507765</amazonuk>
 
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1739805100
|author=Jane Brown
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|title=Loving the Enemy: Building bridges in a time of war
|title=Lancelot 'Capability' Brown: The Omnipotent Magician 1716-1783
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|author=Andrew March
|rating=4
 
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=Among those who helped their contemporaries living through the Age of Enlightenment to see the world around them in a different light, Brown was unquestionably one of the most influential. Having trained as a gardener, as a young man he acquired an exhaustive knowledge of plants and trees, as well as of drainage and water management.  To this was added a rare ability to look at the dullest of gardens and landscapes, decide that they had 'capabilities' for improvement (hence the time-honoured epithet), and persuade the owner that a transformation was both possible and desirable.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1845951794</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Johanna Adorjan
 
|title=An Exclusive Love
 
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=This moving memoir tells of the double suicide of both István (a Hungarian-Jewish form of Stephen) and his wife Vera one Sunday morning in October. The story is told by their granddaughter, Joanna Adorján and tells of her close fondness for them both but in particular with Vera, with whom the author shares many characteristics. The story begins with the systematic persecution of such Hungarian Jews in Budapest under the Nazi occupation and describes their perilous flight to Denmark after the Soviet occupation of Hungary in 1956. It ends with the police reports of the duty officer dated 15.10.91 with the discovery of their bodies in their bungalow in the Charlottenlund, a town of the Capital Region of Denmark. Entry is gained by a local locksmith who charged 297.02 kroner. It is the charm and lyricism with which this tale is related which makes this fateful, haunting and profoundly moving story about identity both sad and memorable.  
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|summary= ''Loving the Enemy'' tells the quite extraordinary story of author Andrew March's grandparents, who first met when grandfather Fred Clayton went to Dresden to teach in the early days of the Nazi regime in the 1930s. Fred, a sensitive and thoughtful man, had some vague ideas of "building bridges" which may guard against the growing hostilities between nations unfolding in Europe at the time. Fred's attempts to separate individual people from ideology weren't universally successful but he did make friendships and connections that lasted for a lifetime.  
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099552671</amazonuk>
 
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|author=Will Brooker
|author=Karen Blumenthal
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|title=The Truth About Lisa Jewell
|title=Steve Jobs: The Man Who Thought Different
 
 
|rating=5
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=Framed by Jobs' iconic speech at a Stanford College graduation ceremony, and the three stories he told the students, about connecting the dots, love and loss, and mortality, this biography gives a succinct and balanced account of Jobs' life, his successes and his failures, his passions and his ideals, and his infamously polarized personality. The author actively annotates the backstory of Jobs with references from this speech, as well as future events, carefully chosen statistics, and Jobs' own reminiscence, giving a rich context to his story. Jobs' achievements are incredible and they're not simply down to his genius, but his attitudes towards life and his incredible charisma.  
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|summary=Meet [[:Category:Lisa Jewell|Lisa Jewell]], one of the most successful British authors I've never knowingly read.  Now meet Will Brooker, one of the thousands of less successful authors I quite confidently never have read.  This book starts with the two meeting each other, as well, and shows how 2021 drew the two closer and closer together.  The meeting was some unspecified combination, it seems, of her anecdote about cup cakes, the words of her latest book she was reciting, and her being in a ''black lace mini-dress with gold brocade'' (certainly a get-up never commonly worn at the author events I get to attend), but pulled Brooker, a professor of cultural studies who has swallowed Roland Barthes, down the rabbit-hole that is Jewell's diverse output.  Brooker decides he'd like nothing more than to follow her through a year in the published author's life, working to make a success of the latest title, and struggling with the next in line.  Jewell, due diligence appropriately done, agrees.  And this is the result.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1408832062</amazonuk>
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|isbn=1529136024
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{{Frontpage
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|author= Martha Leigh
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|title= Invisible Ink: A Family Memoir
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|rating= 5
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|genre= Biography
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|summary=  Martha Leigh begins her book talking about a childhood spent in a slightly eccentric, immediately recognisable upper middle class English family. Her father is a Cambridge don, forever clacking away on his typewriter as he edits the complete correspondence of the philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau, his life's work. Her mother is a concert pianist who practises for hours every day. Neither parent is hugely interested in the practicalities of life. There is love in the house but also darker undercurrents that a child does not fully understand but knows is there.
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|isbn=1800460384
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|author=Polly Barton
|author=Mary M Talbot and Bryan Talbot
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|title=Fifty Sounds
|title=Dotter of Her Father's Eyes
 
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
|genre=Graphic Novels
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|genre=Politics and Society
|summary=If there's one person able to produce a worthwhile potted history of James Joyce's daughter, it should be Mary M Talbot. She's an eminent academic, and her father was a major Joycean scholar.  Both females had parents with the same names too - James and Nora, both took to the stage when younger after going to dance school, but it's the contrasts between them this volume subtly picks out rather than any similarities, in a dual biography painted by one person we know by now as more than able to produce a delightful graphic novel - [[:Category:Bryan Talbot|Bryan Talbot]].
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|summary= Where do I start? I could start with where Barton herself starts, with the question ''Why Japan?'' Japan has been on my radar for a while and if the world hadn't gone into melt-down I would have visited by now. I may get there later this year, but I am not hopeful. And like Barton, I don't know the answer to the question ''why Japan?'' She explains her feelings in respect of the question in the first essay, which is on the sound ''giro' '' – which she describes as being, among other things, the sound of ''every party where you have to introduce yourself''.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0224096087</amazonuk>
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|isbn=1913097501
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|author=Frederic Gros
|author=Michael Holroyd
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|title=A Philosophy of Walking
|title=A Book of Secrets, Illegitimate Daughters, Absent Fathers
 
 
|rating=5
 
|rating=5
|genre=Biography
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|genre= Politics and Society
|summary=Picture the crowded atelier of the renowned sculptor, Rodin or perhaps the dimly lit corridors of Lord Grimthorpe's mansion. Perhaps you might prefer to frequent the brightly lit splendour of the balconies of the coastal villa at Cimbrone above the magnificent Gulf of Salerno. The inhabitants of such places led their tangled lives, sometimes enduring painful losses or by contrast, energetically inspired to passionate love affairs. In these stimulating environments we catch glimpses of the famous, like E.M.Forster, Virginia Woolf, sometimes accompanied by her close confidante, Vita Sackville West and then there was that tempestuous iconoclast, D.H.Lawrence. Many such lives were inspired by both landscape and lust, fashioned by each other's creative energies and endowed with artistic talents of all kinds. Here we learn of talents and beauty that inspires artistic endeavour, like the many charms of Eve Fairfax. She, who after brief affairs was gradually forced into a stoic suspension which she recorded with thoughts from her friends in the pages of annotated diaries which became ''A Book of Secrets''.
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|summary= I confess I picked this one up from the library in my pre-lockdown forage of random stuff. Now I have to go out an buy my own copy so that I can turn down the pages I have marked and return to its varying wisdom when I need to.   Some books draw you in slowly. This one had me in the first two pages, wherein Gros explains why ''walking is not a sport''.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099548941</amazonuk>
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|isbn=1781688370
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|author=Sharon Blackie
|author=Colin Grant
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|title=If Women Rose Rooted
|title=I & I: The Natural Mystics
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|rating=5
|rating=4
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|genre= Biography
|genre=Biography
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|summary= I normally say that you can tell how much a book means to me by how many pages have corners turned downPerhaps an even greater measure of impact is setting out to buy my own copy before I've finished reading the one I've borrowedI want to avoid clichés like 'powerful' 'inspiring' 'life-changing' – although it is definitely the first two and only time will tell about the third – but clichés exist for a reason and I'm not sure I can succinctly put it any better.
|summary=
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|isbn=1912836017
Just mention the word reggae, and the name that nearly always springs to mind is that of Bob Marley and the WailersThe music has always been very much a product of the Jamaican culture, nurtured in years of turbulent historyIn this book Colin Grant, born in Britain of Jamaican parents, goes back deep into its roots, and in the process examines the childhood lives of the Wailers’ three main personalities, namely Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, and Neville Livingston, better known as Bunny Wailer, to provide an account of the group – but much more than that.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099526727</amazonuk>
 
 
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}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=0241446732
|author=Peter Ackroyd
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|title=Our House is on Fire: Scenes of a Family and a Planet in Crisis
|title=Dickens: A Memoir of Middle Age
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|author=Malena Ernman, Greta Thunberg, Beata Thunberg and Svante Thunberg
|rating=4
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|rating=5
|genre=Biography
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|genre=Politics and Society
|summary=
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|summary=The Ernman / Thunberg family seemed perfectly normal.  Malena Ernman was an opera singer and Svante Thunberg took on most of the parenting of their two daughters.  Then eleven-year-old Greta stopped eating and talking and her sister, Beata, then nine years old, struggled with what was happening.  In such circumstances, it's natural to seek a solution close to home, but eventually, it became clear to the family that they were ''burned-out people on a burned-out planet''If they were to find a way to live happily again their solution would need to be radical.
With publishers falling over each other in an effort to outdo each other in celebrating the bicentenary of Charles Dickens’ birth, it was perhaps inevitable that we should see a reappearance of what has become the modern standard life, by Peter AckroydThe 1200-page original was first published in 1990, while this 600-page abridged edition surfaced in 1994, and now makes another timely appearance.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099437090</amazonuk>
 
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=0648684806
|author=Paul Hendrickson
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|title=Clara Colby: The International Suffragist
|title=Hemingway's Boat: Everything he loved in life, and lost, 1934-1961
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|author=John Holliday
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=This substantial volume is not exactly a full biography of Ernest HemingwayIn fact, it might almost have been subtitled ‘The rise and fall’Its theme is more or less the second half of his life, from 1934, when he returned from an African safari and took delivery of his boat Pilar, to his tragic death 27 years laterHendrickson intends it to be an account of the writer, bringing together the different elements of his life – fishing, friendship, wives and family - and above all, naturally, his writing.
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|summary=The path of Clara Dorothy Bewick's life was probably determined when her family emigrated to the USAAt the time she was just three-years-old but because of some childhood ailment, she wasn't allowed to sail with her parents and three brothersInstead, she remained with her grandparents, who doted on her and saw that she received a good education, both in and out of schoolShe was the only child in the household and her childhood was glorious.  By contrast, her family had become pioneer farmers in the mid-west of the United States and life was hard, as Clara was to find out when she and her grandparents eventually went to join the family.  Clara would only know her mother for a few months: she was married for fifteen years, had ten pregnancies, seven surviving children and died in childbirth not long after Clara arrived.  As the eldest girl, a heavy burden would fall on Clara and Wisconsin was a rude awakening.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1847921930</amazonuk>
 
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1789017977
|author=Sarah Bradford
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|title=Ronnie and Hilda's Romance: Towards a New Life after World War II
|title=Queen Elizabeth II: Her Life in Our Times
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|author=Wendy Williams
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
|genre=Biography
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|genre=History
|summary=As a biographer who has previously written substantial biographies of the Queen (published in 1996), of her father George VI, and her daughter-in-law Diana, Sarah Bradford needs little introductionAt around 260 pages of text, this is barely half the length of her other titles, and probably aimed more at the general reader with an eye on the Diamond Jubilee market.
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|summary=Ronnie Williams was the son of Thomas Henry Williams (known as Harry) and Ethel Wall.  There's some doubt as to whether or not they were ever married or even Harry's birthdate: he claimed to have been born in 1863, but he was already many years older than Ethel and he might well have shaved a few years off his age.  For a while, the family was quite well-to-do but disaster struck in the 1929 Depression and five-year-old Ronnie had to adjust to a very different lifestyleOne thing he did inherit from his father was his need to be well-turned-out and this would stay with him throughout his life.  He joined the army at eighteen in 1942.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>067091911X</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|author=Patti Smith
|author=Mick O'Shea
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|title=Year of the Monkey
|title=Amy Winehouse: A Losing Game
 
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=At the risk of stating the obvious, this is a sad book.  Writing this review some five months after her death, now the immediate smoke has cleared, it is apparent from this book (as well as other general sources) that she was a gifted performer, with a jazz voice which could have qualified her for a lengthy career long after scores of aspiring X-Factor contestants had given up singing and opted for less glamorous, more steady careers.  After all, her idols had been not only near-contemporaries like Michael Jackson and Missy Elliott, but also those of an earlier generation such as the classic 1960s girl groups, as well as Frank Sinatra and Tony Bennett, with whom she was thrilled to record a duet four months before she died.
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|summary=On the coast of Santa Cruz, Patti Smith enters the lunar year of the monkey - one packed with mischief, sorrow, and unexpected moments. In a stranger's words, ''Anything is possible: after all, it's the year of the monkey''. As Smith wanders the coast of Santa Cruz in solitude, she reflects on a year that brings huge shifts in her life - loss and ageing are faced head-on, as it the shifting political waters in America.  
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0859654826</amazonuk>
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|isbn=1526614758
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1912242052
|author=Matthew Hollis
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|title=O Joy for me!
|title=Now All Roads Lead to France: The Last Years of Edward Thomas
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|author=Keir Davidson
|rating=5
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|rating=3
|genre=Biography
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|genre=Art
|summary=Most historians tend to refer to Edwardian England as the thirteen-year interlude between the Victorian era and the shots at Sarajevo which precipitated the First World War, an era of relative stability.  However, there had been ominous rumblings from the new order of things during the two years or so prior to June 1914, particularly from a new spirit among the younger literary generation.  The old Victorian writers, notably the uniquely terrible Poet Laureate Alfred Austin (doubtless a very good man, but an almost comically inept writer of verse) were dismissed as irredeemably old hat by the likes of Rupert Brooke and W.H. DaviesFor a short time London was the poetry capital of the world, and the book opens with the opening in January 1913 of Harold Monro’s poetry bookshop in Bloomsbury, which rapidly became a magnet for the self-proclaimed Georgian poets and readers.
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|summary=''Oh Joy for me!'' gives Coleridge credit for being ''the first person to walk the mountains alone, not because he had to for work, as a miner, quarryman, shepherd or pack-horse driver, but because he wanted to for pleasure and adventureHis rapturous encounters with their natural beauty, and its literary consequences, changed our view of the world''.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0571245986</amazonuk>
 
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=Graff_Find
|author=Julia Blackburn
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|title=Find Another Place
|title=Thin Paths: Journeys in and Around an Italian Mountain Village
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|author=Ben Graff
|rating=4
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|rating=3.5
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=Julia Blackburn had known Herman for many years, but they had drifted apart.  She put the postcard which she received from him in an album: it mentioned a cottage he had discovered in Liguria and which he was renovating.  Some time later there was another postcard and an invitation to visit.  Over time the cottage would become her home and Herman her husband.  'Thin Paths' is the stories of the people who inhabit this harsh, wild landscape and of the way in which the landscape has formed the people.  The thin paths join the people and the places together in a way of life which is rare.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0224090682</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Erica Heller
 
|title=Yossarian Slept Here
 
|rating=5
 
 
|genre=Autobiography
 
|genre=Autobiography
|summary='To live forever or die in the attempt' was the essential glory in life and living that is at the heart of John Yossarian in [[Catch 22 by Joseph Heller|Catch 22]]. This autobiography of the daughter of his creator, Joseph Heller, reveals how the same excitement and joie de vivre suffused throughout the Heller family. The harebrained unpredictability, the madcap exploits and relationships bowl us through this book with terrific pace and verve.
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|summary=When Ben Graff's grandfather Martin handed him a plastic folder of handwritten notes from his journal, he didn't take much notice of it. At the age of 24, Graff didn't realise the gravity of the pages he was holding.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099570084</amazonuk>
 
 
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{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author=Chambers and Joan Bakewell
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|isbn=1789016304
|title=Chambers Biographical Dictionary
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|title=War and Love: A family's testament of anguish, endurance and devotion in occupied Amsterdam
|rating=4
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|author=Melanie Martin
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=It's now the ninth edition of this famous volume and that came as a bit of a shock when I glanced at the bookcase and realised that my copy dated back to 1974 and was still in regular use for a quick guide as to who might have been who.  It's advertised as 'the great, the good, the not-so-great and the downright wicked' and it's difficult to better that summary.  It has eighteen thousand biographies and differs from ''Who's Who'' with it's thirty thousand entries in that covers the dead as well as the living and the ''interesting'' rather than those who need to be included because they have achieved a certain position.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0550106936</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Claire Tomalin
 
|title=Charles Dickens: A Life
 
 
|rating=5
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=Having already written biographies of Thomas Hardy and Jane Austen, among others, to say nothing of a study of Dickens and his mistress Nelly Ternan, Claire Tomalin is admirably qualified to produce a major life of the author to mark the bicentenary of his birth in 1812(Sadly, she says this will be her last large-scale book).
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|summary=Melanie Martin read about what happened to Dutch Jews in occupied Amsterdam during World War II and was entranced by what she discovered, particularly in ''The Diary of Ann Frank'' but then realised that her own family's stories were equally fascinating. A hundred and seven thousand Jews were deported from the city during the war years, but only five thousand survived and Martin could not understand how this could be allowed to happen in a country with liberal values who were resistant to German occupation.  Most people believed that the occupation could never happen: even those who thought that the Germans might reach the city were convinced that they would soon be pushed back, that the Amsterdammers would never allow what happened to escalate in the way that it did, but initial protests melted away as the organisers became more circumspectIt's an atrocity on a vast scale but made up of tens of thousands of individual tragedies.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0670917672</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1786893452
|author=Jermaine Jackson
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|title=The Ungrateful Refugee
|title=You Are Not Alone: Michael Through A Brother's Eyes
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|author=Dina Nayeri
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=It is inevitable that the books we have already seen about Michael Jackson in the two years since his sudden passing will be merely the tip of the iceberg. Yet for those which comprise and are based on first-hand knowledge of his life and death, there will surely be few if any to rival this account by his brother Jermaine and ghostwriter Steve Dennis.
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|summary=Here in the West, we see news reports about immigrants on a regular basis – some media welcoming them, some scaremongering about them. But all of those stories are written by journalists – almost always western, and almost always, no matter how deep the investigative journalism they carry out, outsiders to the world and the situations that refugees find themselves in. It's rare that we find out the journeys from the refugees themselves – and this is a rare opportunity to do that, in this intelligent, powerful and moving work by Dina Nayeri -someone who was born in the middle of a revolution in Iran, fleeing to America as a ten-year-old.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0007435665</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=0857058320
|author=Graham Holderness
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|title=Lord Of All the Dead
|title=Nine Lives of William Shakespeare
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|author=Javier Cercas and Anne McLean (translator)
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=There is a subtle irony in the fact that the world’s best-known playwright, and possibly the most famous author of all time, is a character about whom so little is known for certain. Nevertheless, as we are looking at someone who died nearly 400 years ago, the indisputable documentary evidence is bound to be lacking.
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|summary=''Lord Of All the Dead'' is a journey to uncover the author's lost ancestor's life and death. Cercas is searching for the meaning behind his great uncle's death in the Spanish Civil War. Manuel Mena, Cercas' great uncle, is the figure who looms large over the book. He died relatively young whilst fighting for Francisco Franco's forces. Cercas ruminates on why his uncle fought for this dictator. The question at the centre of this book is whether it is possible for his great uncle to be a hero whilst having fought for the wrong side.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1441151850</amazonuk>
 
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1788037812
|author=Anne Isba
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|title=The Fraternity of the Estranged: The Fight for Homosexual Rights in England, 1891-1908
|title=Dickens's Women: His Life and Loves
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|author=Brian Anderson
|rating=4
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|rating=5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=
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|summary=Originally passed in 1885, the law that had made homosexual relations a crime remained in place for 82 years. But during this time, restrictions on same-sex relationships did not go unchallenged. Between 1891 and 1908, three books on the nature of homosexuality appeared. They were written by two homosexual men: Edward Carpenter and John Addington Symonds, as well as the heterosexual Havelock Ellis. Exploring the margins of society and studying homosexuality was common on the European Continent, but barely talked about in the UK, so the publications of these men were hugely significant – contributing to the scientific understanding of homosexuality, and beginning the struggle for recognition and equality, leading to the milestone legalisation of same-sex relationships in 1967.
The subject of the several women in the life of Charles Dickens might at first glance seem an unusual theme to build a biography around, but this fairly brief but penetrating book serves its purpose well. The author’s foreword begins by telling us that Dickens was a man who 'craved a love so unconditional that the yearning was unlikely to be satisfied in this world, a man in thrall to a vision of a womanhood so idealized that it was incompatible with everyday domesticity'.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1441107207</amazonuk>
 
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=Buckland_Zoo
|author=Bruce Duffy
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|title=The Man Who Ate the Zoo: Frank Buckland, forgotten hero of natural history
|title=Disaster was my God
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|author=Richard Girling
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
|genre=Literary Fiction
 
|summary=The life of Arthur Rimbaud must be one of the most outrageous in literary history, more scandalous than Wilde, more self-destructive than Malcolm Lowery, Rimbaud was the boy poet and iconoclast who took on the literary establishment at end of the nineteenth century and won. So Duffy's fictional account, based closely around the actual facts of Rimbaud's life, was bound to be an exciting and furious, and he doesn't disappoint. This is a difficult book to put down.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1846685273</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Paul Oppenheimer
 
|title=Machiavelli: A Life Beyond Ideology
 
|rating=4
 
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=Machiavelli, 'the first philosopher to define politics as treachery', has probably been better known as an adjective, Machiavellian being a synonym for duplicity in statecraft, than as a historical person. Interestingly, the term 'Machiavel' became common in English usage as an adjective and noun around 1570, although none of his works were translated into the language for another seventy years or so after that.
+
|summary=As a conservationist in Victorian England before the term existed, Frank Buckland was very much a man ahead of his time. Surgeon, naturalist, veterinarian and eccentric sums him up perfectly, and any biographer is immediately presented with a colourful tale to tell.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1847252214</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
+
{{Frontpage
{{newreview
+
|isbn=Williams_Captain
|author=Roger Hutchinson
+
|title=Captain Ronald Campbell of Bombala Station, Cambalong: His Military Life and Times
|title=The Silent Weaver
+
|author=Ivor George Williams
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=There is no question but that the story of Angus has all the right ingredients for a fascinating study. Taken from his Scottish Lowlands agricultural early childhood to the isolation of a Hebridean island of South Uist, joining the last ever horse platoon in the British Army at the outbreak of the Second World War, then mental breakdown and effective incarceration for almost all the rest of his life, he created some of the most unusual works of folk art that have existed this century. And Hutchison tackles every angle of this rich narrative, exploring the military thinking behind how horse regiments were to combat Hitler, through to the operations of mental health care in later twentieth century Scotland, and all points in between.
+
|summary=In March 1829 Ann Parker married Captain J A Edwards of the 17th Regiment of Foot. He was in command of the troops and convicts on board a ship sailing from Plymouth to Sydney, Australia: his wife and young son accompanied him. He was not destined to live a long life, dying suddenly at the age of 34 at Bangalore, leaving his widow to raise their two young sons. Edwards' death left his widow in a difficult position: not only did she have their farm to manage, but she was also responsible for the convicts who worked the land. Two years later she would marry Captain Ronald Campbell.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1841589713</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
+
{{Frontpage
{{newreview
+
|isbn=Peacock_mountain
|author=Harry Thompson
+
|title=Into The Mountain, A Life of Nan Shepherd
|title=Tintin: Herge and His Creation
+
|author=Charlotte Peacock
|rating=3.5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=I love Tintin.  I love his quiff and his innocence, his plus-fours and his foreign adventures, I love Snowy the dog and most of all I love Captain Haddock and the flamboyance of his blistering barnacles language.  So I was thrilled to see a biography of the character and Hergé, his creator, and I picked it up with enthusiasm.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1848546726</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Stephen Games
 
|title=Pevsner: The Early Life: Germany and Art
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=Nikolai Pewsner – the minor changes of name came as a young adult - was born in Saxony in 1902 into a Russian-Jewish family.  Just too young to avoid having to take part in the war, he had studied art history at no less than four universities by the age of 22.  He then became an assistant keeper at the Dresden Gemaldegalerie, and four years later he was appointed lecturer at Gottingen University.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1441190937</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Nancy Mitford
 
|title=The Sun King
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=History
 
|summary=Nancy Mitford assumes that you'll need no introduction to Louis XIV, who ascended the throne when he was four years old and reigned for well over seventy two years.  To put him in context his reign began before Charles I was executed in Whitehall, lasted through the English Civil War, Oliver Cromwell's Commonwealth, the reigns of Charles I, James II, William III and into the beginning of the reign of Queen Anne.  He bridged the gap between the middle ages and the early modern era.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099528886</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Matthew Kelly
 
|title=Finding Poland
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=History
 
|summary=Looking at any historical map of Poland anyone may see how its borders have changed over the centuries. Where will you find the Polish home? One answer must be that it is founded deep in the hearts of the Polish people who fought for the liberty and the integrity of the Polish homeland. Now consider the promontory of land around Vilnius, or Wilno as it was then known, which was contained inside Poland in 1921. It was an area in which the small market town of Hruzdowa, comprising some 52 buildings and just large enough to warrant a town hall, was situated. These wild borderlands – known as the Kresy - were fought over for centuries by Austrians, Russians, Belarusians, Ukrainians and Lithuanians. It was here that Matthew Kelly's great-grandfather, who had imbibed the values and élan of the dashing officer class, Rafal Ryzewscy, came to teach with his clever young wife, Hanna. They were deeply committed to progress through education and to peaceably raising their two little daughters. However, the dreadful and calamitous year of 1939, was approaching when Hitler and Stalin partitioned Poland in the most cynical pact.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099515997</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Cita Stelzer
 
|title=Dinner with Churchill: The Prime Minister's Tabletop Diplomacy
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=History
 
|summary=Winston Churchill was never a man to don the hair shirt.  A comfortable upbringing in the days when elaborate multiple courses were the done thing imbued in him from an early age a taste for the good things in life, and a bon viveur he remained until the very end.  Throughout his life he loved his food, and until near the end of his life, his appetite and digestion remained excellent, whereas many men in their advancing years might have cut back a little.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1907595422</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=David Savage
 
|title=Furniture with Soul: Master Woodworkers and Their Craft
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Crafts
 
|summary=David Savage is a master furniture maker and one of the artists featured in the book, so he is not – as he says himself – a neutral observer and nor can he be neutral in choosing who to include in the book.  Having said that, the pictures alone will tell you that he has chosen people who create furniture of great beauty and – often – originality.  It's the text that makes the book shine, though – as it seeks not to give a critical appreciation of each man and one woman's work, but to look at what makes them tick, what drives them on and how they have handled the good times as well as the bad.  It is, if you like, ten in-depth biographies of artists who work in a common medium and ten shorter pieces about those we should look out for in the future.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>4770031211</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=D R Thorpe
 
|title=Supermac: The Life of Harold Macmillan
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=The great-grandson of a crofter, and son-in-law of a Duke, Harold Macmillan was born in London in 1894.  Despite the well-to-do aristocratic background, his years as a young adult were marked by bad experiences in the trenches which left him with lifelong war wounds, and his early service as a Conservative Member of Parliament by the plight of the unemployed in his first constituency of Stockton.  He had much in common with another future Prime Minister, Winston Churchill; both had American mothers, and both were mavericks who were elected as Conservatives but refused to toe the party line too steadfastly.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1844135411</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Robert Ross
 
|title=Marty Feldman: The Biography of a Comedy Legend
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=Some years ago, I was given a Penguin edition of Wilde's 'The Picture of Dorian Gray', with what looked like an uniquely fearsome face on the front cover.  A year or two later, I saw a photograph of Marty Feldman and was convinced he must have inspired it if not actually been the model.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0857683780</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Bettany Hughes
 
|title=The Hemlock Cup: Socrates, Athens and the Search for the Good Life
 
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|genre=Biography
|summary=We don't know much about Socrates. For someone whose ideas are still so relevant so long after his death, his life is something of a mystery. He didn't like to write things down, and so Hughes begins this book by saying that it may have something of a 'Socrates-sized hole' in it. What we do see is the city of Athens, and the hugely important changes which were going on there while Socrates was alive. In Athens we see the beginnings of democracy, the seedlings of some of the ideas that we take for granted today, such as freedom of speech, and the right to a fair trial. This was an important time in the development of modern values, and Socrates was an important man. He was not only a brilliant thinker, he was also a man that didn't quite fit, infuriating to converse with, yet fascinating to be around.
+
|summary=Mostly we choose what books to read because there is so little time and so many books… I can understand the approach, but I also think we sell ourselves short by it, and we sell the myriad lesser-known authors short as well. So while, like most other people I have my favourite genres, and favoured authors, and while, like most other people I read the reviews and follow up on what appeals, I also have a third-string to my reading bow: randomness.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099554054</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
  
{{newreview
+
Move on to [[Newest Business and Finance Reviews]]
|author=Stacy Schiff
 
|title=Cleopatra: A Life
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=Stacey Schiff's biography starts more of less from Cleopatra's infamous meeting with Caesar, where she sneaks into his rooms in a sack. This is one of the most popular images of Cleopatra in the public consciousness and Schiff happily refutes the image of her emerging as a well polished seductress, pointing out that anyone who had been carried in a sack for a considerable period of time will more likely be fairly dishevelled. Schiff takes us through from this moment up to Cleopatra's much dramatised death, and beyond, to the end of the Ptolemaic dynasty.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>075353956X</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Tina Brown
 
|title=The Diana Chronicles
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=''The Diana Chronicles'' was first published in 2007, ten years after Diana's untimely death (forgive me if I proffer information that you already know, but prior to reading this book, I was one of the small group of people in this country happily oblivious to the Princess Diana industry). The book has been re-released in shocking pink, white and gold livery, as a 'commemorative edition' to coincide with The Royal Wedding. A fanciful Foreword now imagines Diana's life and reaction to Will and Kate's marriage, had she survived.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099568357</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Frances Wilson
 
|title=How to Survive the Titanic or the Sinking of J. Bruce Ismay
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=As I read 'How to Survive the Titanic' I was conscious that we're only a matter of months away from the centenary of the sinking – and a slew of media to mark the occasion.  Given that the subject has been mined extensively over the years it will be interesting to see whether there's anything new to be said about the tragedy.  It's a subject which has always fascinated me – and it was with a sense of anticipation that I opened the book.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1408809222</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Andrew Crowther
 
|title=Gilbert of Gilbert and Sullivan: His Life and Character
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=Gilbert and Sullivan were the Rice and Lloyd Webber of the late Victorian era.  Some might regard their work as slightly dated these days, especially the satirical lyrics which were so much a product of their time, but their appeal has never really faded and it surely never will.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0752455893</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=D J Taylor
 
|title=Thackeray
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Biography
 
|summary=Today, William Makepeace Thackeray is remembered almost exclusively as the writer of 'Vanity Fair', considered as among the greatest novels of its time.  Yet he was a prolific writer, also responsible for 'Pendennis' and 'The Newcomes', as well as several sketches, essays and much poetry.  However most of his work is largely forgotten today, while as a person he remains little known, and he has been somewhat overshadowed by his better-known contemporary, old friend and rival Charles Dickens, born one year later.  This biography does an excellent job in rescuing him from such semi-obscurity.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099563258</amazonuk>
 
}}
 

Latest revision as of 10:40, 18 November 2024

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Review of

Monsters: What Do We Do with Great Art by Bad People? by Claire Dederer

3star.jpg Politics and Society

Dederer sets out to unveil what she calls a biography of the audience in a deconstructed, thoroughly nitpicked, exploration of the old aphorism of separating the art from the artist in the context of contemporary cancel culture. Dederer's work is original and expressive. The reader gets the impression that the thoughts simply sprang and leapt from her brilliant mind and onto the page. In particular, the prologue packs a punch: she simultaneously condemns and exalts the director Roman Polanski, an artist she personally admires for his art, and yet despises for his actions. This model of monstrous men as she calls them, is consistent for the first few chapters, interrogating the likes of Woody Allen, Michael Jackson and Pablo Picasso. Her critical voice is acutely present throughout, never slipping into anonymity and maintaining her own subjectivity, as she holds it so dearly, and a personal, rather than collective voice. Full Review

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Review of

Charles, The Alternative Prince: An Unauthorised Biography by Edzard Ernst

4star.jpg Biography

For over forty years, Prince Charles has been an ardent supporter of alternative medicine and complementary therapies. Charles, The Alternative Prince critically assesses the Prince's opinions, beliefs and aims against the background of the scientific evidence. There are few instances of his beliefs being vindicated and his relentless promotion of treatments which have no scientific support has done considerable damage to the reputation of a man who is proud of his refusal to apply evidence-based, logical reasoning to his ambitions. Full Review

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Review of

Loving the Enemy: Building bridges in a time of war by Andrew March

4.5star.jpg Biography

Loving the Enemy tells the quite extraordinary story of author Andrew March's grandparents, who first met when grandfather Fred Clayton went to Dresden to teach in the early days of the Nazi regime in the 1930s. Fred, a sensitive and thoughtful man, had some vague ideas of "building bridges" which may guard against the growing hostilities between nations unfolding in Europe at the time. Fred's attempts to separate individual people from ideology weren't universally successful but he did make friendships and connections that lasted for a lifetime. Full Review

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Review of

The Truth About Lisa Jewell by Will Brooker

5star.jpg Biography

Meet Lisa Jewell, one of the most successful British authors I've never knowingly read. Now meet Will Brooker, one of the thousands of less successful authors I quite confidently never have read. This book starts with the two meeting each other, as well, and shows how 2021 drew the two closer and closer together. The meeting was some unspecified combination, it seems, of her anecdote about cup cakes, the words of her latest book she was reciting, and her being in a black lace mini-dress with gold brocade (certainly a get-up never commonly worn at the author events I get to attend), but pulled Brooker, a professor of cultural studies who has swallowed Roland Barthes, down the rabbit-hole that is Jewell's diverse output. Brooker decides he'd like nothing more than to follow her through a year in the published author's life, working to make a success of the latest title, and struggling with the next in line. Jewell, due diligence appropriately done, agrees. And this is the result. Full Review

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Review of

Invisible Ink: A Family Memoir by Martha Leigh

5star.jpg Biography

Martha Leigh begins her book talking about a childhood spent in a slightly eccentric, immediately recognisable upper middle class English family. Her father is a Cambridge don, forever clacking away on his typewriter as he edits the complete correspondence of the philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau, his life's work. Her mother is a concert pianist who practises for hours every day. Neither parent is hugely interested in the practicalities of life. There is love in the house but also darker undercurrents that a child does not fully understand but knows is there. Full Review

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Review of

Fifty Sounds by Polly Barton

4.5star.jpg Politics and Society

Where do I start? I could start with where Barton herself starts, with the question Why Japan? Japan has been on my radar for a while and if the world hadn't gone into melt-down I would have visited by now. I may get there later this year, but I am not hopeful. And like Barton, I don't know the answer to the question why Japan? She explains her feelings in respect of the question in the first essay, which is on the sound giro' – which she describes as being, among other things, the sound of every party where you have to introduce yourself. Full Review

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Review of

A Philosophy of Walking by Frederic Gros

5star.jpg Politics and Society

I confess I picked this one up from the library in my pre-lockdown forage of random stuff. Now I have to go out an buy my own copy so that I can turn down the pages I have marked and return to its varying wisdom when I need to. Some books draw you in slowly. This one had me in the first two pages, wherein Gros explains why walking is not a sport. Full Review

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Review of

If Women Rose Rooted by Sharon Blackie

5star.jpg Biography

I normally say that you can tell how much a book means to me by how many pages have corners turned down. Perhaps an even greater measure of impact is setting out to buy my own copy before I've finished reading the one I've borrowed. I want to avoid clichés like 'powerful' 'inspiring' 'life-changing' – although it is definitely the first two and only time will tell about the third – but clichés exist for a reason and I'm not sure I can succinctly put it any better. Full Review

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Review of

Our House is on Fire: Scenes of a Family and a Planet in Crisis by Malena Ernman, Greta Thunberg, Beata Thunberg and Svante Thunberg

5star.jpg Politics and Society

The Ernman / Thunberg family seemed perfectly normal. Malena Ernman was an opera singer and Svante Thunberg took on most of the parenting of their two daughters. Then eleven-year-old Greta stopped eating and talking and her sister, Beata, then nine years old, struggled with what was happening. In such circumstances, it's natural to seek a solution close to home, but eventually, it became clear to the family that they were burned-out people on a burned-out planet. If they were to find a way to live happily again their solution would need to be radical. Full Review

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Review of

Clara Colby: The International Suffragist by John Holliday

4star.jpg Biography

The path of Clara Dorothy Bewick's life was probably determined when her family emigrated to the USA. At the time she was just three-years-old but because of some childhood ailment, she wasn't allowed to sail with her parents and three brothers. Instead, she remained with her grandparents, who doted on her and saw that she received a good education, both in and out of school. She was the only child in the household and her childhood was glorious. By contrast, her family had become pioneer farmers in the mid-west of the United States and life was hard, as Clara was to find out when she and her grandparents eventually went to join the family. Clara would only know her mother for a few months: she was married for fifteen years, had ten pregnancies, seven surviving children and died in childbirth not long after Clara arrived. As the eldest girl, a heavy burden would fall on Clara and Wisconsin was a rude awakening. Full Review

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Review of

Ronnie and Hilda's Romance: Towards a New Life after World War II by Wendy Williams

4star.jpg History

Ronnie Williams was the son of Thomas Henry Williams (known as Harry) and Ethel Wall. There's some doubt as to whether or not they were ever married or even Harry's birthdate: he claimed to have been born in 1863, but he was already many years older than Ethel and he might well have shaved a few years off his age. For a while, the family was quite well-to-do but disaster struck in the 1929 Depression and five-year-old Ronnie had to adjust to a very different lifestyle. One thing he did inherit from his father was his need to be well-turned-out and this would stay with him throughout his life. He joined the army at eighteen in 1942. Full Review

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Review of

Year of the Monkey by Patti Smith

4star.jpg Biography

On the coast of Santa Cruz, Patti Smith enters the lunar year of the monkey - one packed with mischief, sorrow, and unexpected moments. In a stranger's words, Anything is possible: after all, it's the year of the monkey. As Smith wanders the coast of Santa Cruz in solitude, she reflects on a year that brings huge shifts in her life - loss and ageing are faced head-on, as it the shifting political waters in America. Full Review

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Review of

O Joy for me! by Keir Davidson

3star.jpg Art

Oh Joy for me! gives Coleridge credit for being the first person to walk the mountains alone, not because he had to for work, as a miner, quarryman, shepherd or pack-horse driver, but because he wanted to for pleasure and adventure. His rapturous encounters with their natural beauty, and its literary consequences, changed our view of the world. Full Review

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Review of

Find Another Place by Ben Graff

3.5star.jpg Autobiography

When Ben Graff's grandfather Martin handed him a plastic folder of handwritten notes from his journal, he didn't take much notice of it. At the age of 24, Graff didn't realise the gravity of the pages he was holding. Full Review

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Review of

War and Love: A family's testament of anguish, endurance and devotion in occupied Amsterdam by Melanie Martin

5star.jpg Biography

Melanie Martin read about what happened to Dutch Jews in occupied Amsterdam during World War II and was entranced by what she discovered, particularly in The Diary of Ann Frank but then realised that her own family's stories were equally fascinating. A hundred and seven thousand Jews were deported from the city during the war years, but only five thousand survived and Martin could not understand how this could be allowed to happen in a country with liberal values who were resistant to German occupation. Most people believed that the occupation could never happen: even those who thought that the Germans might reach the city were convinced that they would soon be pushed back, that the Amsterdammers would never allow what happened to escalate in the way that it did, but initial protests melted away as the organisers became more circumspect. It's an atrocity on a vast scale but made up of tens of thousands of individual tragedies. Full Review

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Review of

The Ungrateful Refugee by Dina Nayeri

4.5star.jpg Biography

Here in the West, we see news reports about immigrants on a regular basis – some media welcoming them, some scaremongering about them. But all of those stories are written by journalists – almost always western, and almost always, no matter how deep the investigative journalism they carry out, outsiders to the world and the situations that refugees find themselves in. It's rare that we find out the journeys from the refugees themselves – and this is a rare opportunity to do that, in this intelligent, powerful and moving work by Dina Nayeri -someone who was born in the middle of a revolution in Iran, fleeing to America as a ten-year-old. Full Review

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Review of

Lord Of All the Dead by Javier Cercas and Anne McLean (translator)

4star.jpg Biography

Lord Of All the Dead is a journey to uncover the author's lost ancestor's life and death. Cercas is searching for the meaning behind his great uncle's death in the Spanish Civil War. Manuel Mena, Cercas' great uncle, is the figure who looms large over the book. He died relatively young whilst fighting for Francisco Franco's forces. Cercas ruminates on why his uncle fought for this dictator. The question at the centre of this book is whether it is possible for his great uncle to be a hero whilst having fought for the wrong side. Full Review

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Review of

The Fraternity of the Estranged: The Fight for Homosexual Rights in England, 1891-1908 by Brian Anderson

5star.jpg Biography

Originally passed in 1885, the law that had made homosexual relations a crime remained in place for 82 years. But during this time, restrictions on same-sex relationships did not go unchallenged. Between 1891 and 1908, three books on the nature of homosexuality appeared. They were written by two homosexual men: Edward Carpenter and John Addington Symonds, as well as the heterosexual Havelock Ellis. Exploring the margins of society and studying homosexuality was common on the European Continent, but barely talked about in the UK, so the publications of these men were hugely significant – contributing to the scientific understanding of homosexuality, and beginning the struggle for recognition and equality, leading to the milestone legalisation of same-sex relationships in 1967. Full Review

Buckland Zoo.jpg

Review of

The Man Who Ate the Zoo: Frank Buckland, forgotten hero of natural history by Richard Girling

4.5star.jpg Biography

As a conservationist in Victorian England before the term existed, Frank Buckland was very much a man ahead of his time. Surgeon, naturalist, veterinarian and eccentric sums him up perfectly, and any biographer is immediately presented with a colourful tale to tell. Full Review

Williams Captain.jpg

Review of

Captain Ronald Campbell of Bombala Station, Cambalong: His Military Life and Times by Ivor George Williams

4star.jpg Biography

In March 1829 Ann Parker married Captain J A Edwards of the 17th Regiment of Foot. He was in command of the troops and convicts on board a ship sailing from Plymouth to Sydney, Australia: his wife and young son accompanied him. He was not destined to live a long life, dying suddenly at the age of 34 at Bangalore, leaving his widow to raise their two young sons. Edwards' death left his widow in a difficult position: not only did she have their farm to manage, but she was also responsible for the convicts who worked the land. Two years later she would marry Captain Ronald Campbell. Full Review

Peacock mountain.jpg

Review of

Into The Mountain, A Life of Nan Shepherd by Charlotte Peacock

4.5star.jpg Biography

Mostly we choose what books to read because there is so little time and so many books… I can understand the approach, but I also think we sell ourselves short by it, and we sell the myriad lesser-known authors short as well. So while, like most other people I have my favourite genres, and favoured authors, and while, like most other people I read the reviews and follow up on what appeals, I also have a third-string to my reading bow: randomness. Full Review

Move on to Newest Business and Finance Reviews