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Contents
Vol. 22 No. 13 · 6 July 2000
Jenny Diski writes about Promise of a Dream: A Memoir of the 1960s by Sheila Rowbotham
- Promise of a Dream: A Memoir of the 1960s by Sheila Rowbotham
Wynne Godley writes about the US economy (2000)
Ian Hamilton writes about the screen rights to English Premier League Football
John Lanchester on Martin Amis
- Experience by Martin Amis
Lewis Nkosi, Agnes Grunwald-Spier, Zachary Leader, Matthew Fox, Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen, Roger Hardy, Justin Horton, Roger Jones
Nina Auerbach: Feminists Fall Out
- Critical Condition: Feminism at the Turn of the Century by Susan Gubar
Tom Clark
- This is the Beat Generation: New York, San Francisco, Paris by James Campbell
Colin Kidd
- Barbarism and Religion Vol 1: The Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon, 1737-64 by J.G.A. Peacock
- Barbarism and Religion Vol 2: Narratives of Civil Government by J.G.A. Peacock
Patrick Collinson: Learning to be Queen
- Elizabeth: Apprenticeship by David Starkey
- Elizabeth I: Collected Works edited by Leah Marcus and Janel Mueller
Simon Adams
- The Letters of Sir Walter Raleigh edited by Agnes Latham and Joyce Youings
Iain Fenlon
- Antonio Salieri and Viennese Opera by John Rice
Margaret Anne Doody
- Splitting the Difference: Gender and Myth in Ancient Greece and India by Wendy Doniger
- The Implied Spider: Politics and Theology in Myth by Wendy Doniger
Leah Price: Ectoplasm
- Teller of Tales: The Life of Arthur Conan Doyle by Daniel Stashower
D.D. Guttenplan
- Whitehall and The Jews 1933-48 by Louise London
Daniel Soar
- The Question of Bruno by Aleksandar Hemon
Richard Fortey
- Deep Time: Cladistics, the Revolution in Evolution by Henry Gee
M.F. Perutz: Memories of J.D.Bernal
Contributors
Simon Adams’s Leicester and the Court: Essays on Elizabethan Politics came out in 2002.
Nina Auerbach teaches at the University of Pennsylvania; she writes frequently about ghosts, ghostly creatures and vampires.
Tom Clark’s novel, The Spell, was published by Black Sparrow Press in June 2000. He has written a biography of Kerouac.
Patrick Collinson succeeded Sir Geoffrey Elton, Thomas Cromwell redivivus, as Regius Professor of Modern History at Cambridge University.
Allen Curnow, a poet often published and much admired by the LRB, died in September 2001. Early Days Yet: New and Collected Poems, 1941-97 is available from Carcanet. The Bells of Saint Babel’s has just been published in paperback.
Jenny Diski’s new novel, Apology for the Woman Writing, will be published in November. She is currently bobbing about on the South Atlantic.
Margaret Anne Doody is John and Barbara Glynn Family Professor of Literature at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana. She is the author of The True Story of the Novel
Iain Fenlon is a reader in historical musicology at Cambridge.
Richard Fortey is a research scientist at the Natural History Museum and visiting professor of palaeobiology at Oxford. The Earth: An Intimate History was shortlisted for the Aventis science writing prize 2005.
Wynne Godley was a professional oboe player for some years in his twenties; in his thirties he joined the Treasury, where he reached the rank of Under-Secretary; in 1970 he became a fellow of King’s College, Cambridge and, later, was appointed director of the Department of Applied Economics. He now lives in the US and is writing an autobiography and a treatise on macro-economics.
D.D. Guttenplan is London correspondent for the Nation and the author of The Holocaust on Trial. He is writing a Life of the American journalist I.F. Stone.
Ian Hamilton contributed many exact, funny and unsparing pieces on poetry, on novels - and on football - to the LRB. He died on 27 December 2001.
Thomas Jones is one of the London Review’s contributing editors.
Colin Kidd is the author of The Forging of Races: Race and Scripture in the Protestant Atlantic World, 1600-2000. He teaches history at Glasgow University.
John Lanchester is a contributing editor at the LRB. His latest book is Family Romance, a memoir.
Jeremy Noel-Tod is about to start a PhD in modern poetry at Cambridge.
M.F. Perutz was a molecular biologist and Nobel Prizewinner, best known for his work on the structure and mechanism of haemoglobin, the protein of the red blood cells. He died in February 2002.
Leah Price teaches English at Harvard. She is the author of The Anthology and the Rise of the Novel.
Daniel Soar is an editor at the London Review.