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London Review of Books Christmas Books

Hare’s Blood subscriber-only content

Peter Wollen

  • The Selected Essays of John Berger edited by Geoff Dyer

John Berger’s selected essays run to nearly six hundred pages, yet that is just the tip of the iceberg if one looks at the totality of his published work: the essays and reviews about the visual arts – drawing, painting, photography, film – but also short stories, journals, screenplays, travel articles, letters, television scripts, translations, novels, poems, even a requiem in three parts which gives a wrenching account of the untimely deaths of three of Berger’s neighbours. From 1951 to 1961 he wrote reviews for the New Statesman, and subsequently published regularly in New Society, as well as New Left Review, the Observer, the Sunday Times Magazine, Marxism Today, Réalités, the Village Voice, Harpers, Granta, Expressen, El País and 7 Days. It is a daunting task to find some way of coming to terms with such a rich and extensive body of work, all of it marked by Berger’s unflagging seriousness, his insistence on somehow merging personal response, social insight, aesthetic theory and political commentary. Every piece is rigorously thought through but also heartfelt, sometimes almost embarrassingly so.

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Peter Wollen teaches at UCLA.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

The Grin without the Cat
David Sylvester views Jackson Pollock at the Tate

Looking at the Ceiling
T.J. Clark: A Savonarolan Bonfire

Always There
Julian Barnes salutes George Braque

So South Kensington
Julian Bell on Walter Sickert

At Tate Britain
Frank Kermode: William Blake