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Contents
Vol. 23 No. 6 · 22 March 2001
Jessica Benjamin, Malcolm Bowie, Christopher Bollas, John Forrester, André Green, Julia Kristeva, Jonathan Lear, Juliet Mitchell, Adam Phillips, J.-B. Pontalis, jacqueline Rose, Moustapha Safouan, Donald Campbell, J.P. Roos, Coline Covington, Kirsty Hall, Linda Hopkins, Salley Vickers, Paul Seabright, G. Colin Jimack, Edward Luttwak, J.R.S. Fincham, Glen Newey
James Meek
- The Invisible Enemy: A Natural History of Viruses by Dorothy Crawford
David Blackbourn
- Hitler, 1936-45: Nemesis by Ian Kershaw
Richard Vinen
- The Death of Jean Moulin: Biography of a Ghost by Patrick Marnham
Thomas Jones: Fastsellers
Iain Bamforth
- The Adversary: A True Story of Murder and Deception by Emmanuel Carrère, translated by Linda Coverdale
John Sturrock
- Victor Segalen and the Aesthetics of Diversity: Journeys between Cultures by Charles Forsdick
Elizabeth Lowry on Doris Lessing
- Doris Lessing: A Biography by Carole Klein
- Ben, in the World by Doris Lessing
Patrick Collinson
- New Worlds, Lost Worlds: The Rule of the Tudors 1485-1603 by Susan Brigden
David Edgar
- Fool of the Family: A Life of J.M. Synge by W.J. McCormack
- Interpreting Synge: Essays from the Synge Summer School 1991-2000 edited by Nicholas Grene
Jenny Diski
- The Truth at Last: My Story by Christine Keeler and Douglas Thompson
Peter Campbell: Paintings from the Berlin Nationalgalerie
- Spirit of an Age: Paintings from the Berlin Nationalgalerie
Jason Burke: An execution in Kabul
Contributors
John Ashbery’s Notes from the Air won the 2008 Griffin International Poetry Prize. The first volume of his collected poems will be published by the Library of America.
Iain Bamforth, who lives in Strasbourg, is preparing a collection of essays on literature and medicine.
David Blackbourn, whose Conquest of Nature: Water, Landscape and the Making of Modern Germany was reviewed in the LRB by Neal Ascherson, teaches history at Harvard.
Jason Burke is on the staff of the Observer.
Peter Campbell is the London Review’s resident designer and art critic.
Patrick Collinson succeeded Sir Geoffrey Elton, Thomas Cromwell redivivus, as Regius Professor of Modern History in the University of Cambridge. His most recent book is From Cranmer to Sanford.
Jenny Diski is writing a book about St Helena. A novel, Apology for the Woman Writing, is coming out in November.
David Edgar is currently adapting Julian Barnes’s Arthur and George for the stage and writing a new play for Out of Joint.
Kathleen Jamie’s latest book of poems is The Tree House. Findings, a book of essays, was published in 2005. She lectures on creative writing at the University of St Andrews.
Thomas Jones is one of the London Review’s contributing editors.
Elizabeth Lowry’s first novel, The Bellini Madonna, will be published by Quercus in July.
James Meek’s most recent novel, We Are Now Beginning Our Descent, was awarded the Prince Maurice prize.
Andrew O’Hagan’s The Atlantic Ocean, a collection of essays on Britain and America, many of which were first published in the London Review, will be published in June. Be Near Me, his last novel, won the 2008 Los Angeles Times Book Prize award for fiction.
John Sturrock is consulting editor at the London Review.
Richard Vinen teaches at King’s College London. A History in Fragments: Europe in the 20th Century is published by Little, Brown.