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Contents
Vol. 25 No. 5 · 6 March 2003
Colin Burrow: Seraphick Love
- Transformations of Love: The Friendship of John Evelyn and Margaret Godolphin by Frances Harris
Roger Etherington, Christopher Prendergast, Conrad Sinclair, William Wells, Stuart Maconie, Phil Edwards, David Nicol, Tim Sanders, Jim Valentine, Colin Tucker, Paul O’Brien, Tim Summers-Scott
Adam Phillips: Nasty Turns
Elaine Showalter on Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
- Touching Feeling: Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
- Regarding Sedgwick: Essays on Queer Culture and Critical Theory edited by Stephen Barber and David Clark
Perry Anderson on the assumptions the Bush Administration and its critics share
Steven Shapin on Robert Hooke
- The Man Who Knew Too Much: The Strange and Inventive Life of Robert Hooke 1635-1703 by Stephen Inwood
Jerry Fodor on Daniel Dennett
- Freedom Evolves by Daniel C. Dennett
James Hamilton-Paterson: Is there anybody out there?
- Evolving the Alien: The Science of Extraterrestrial Life by Jack Cohen and Ian Stewart
- XTL: Extraterrestrial Life and How to Find It by Simon Goodwin and John Gribbin
Rosemary Hill: Where is Bohemia?
- Bohemians: The Glamorous Outcasts by Elizabeth Wilson
- Quentin & Philip by Andrew Barrow
Art Spiegelman: the first instalment of his new comic
Christopher Tayler on Sam Shepard
- Great Dream of Heaven by Sam Shepard
William Skidelsky on Annie Proulx
- That Old Ace in the Hole by Annie Proulx
Jeremy Noel-Tod on Geoffrey Hill
- The Orchards of Syon by Geoffrey Hill
Peter de Bolla: Looking and Feeling
- Pictures & Tears: A History of People Who Have Cried in Front of Paintings by James Elkins
Contributors
Perry Anderson teaches history at UCLA.
Daphne Beal is working on her first novel.
Peter de Bolla, a fellow of King’s College, Cambridge, is the author of Art Matters and the forthcoming The Education of the Eye.
John Burnside’s new novel, Glister, will appear in May. He is a reader in English at St Andrews.
Colin Burrow is a senior research fellow at All Souls College, Oxford. He edited The Complete Sonnets and Poems for the Oxford Shakespeare. You can hear him talking about Milton at http://www.christs.cam.ac.uk/milton400/burrow.htm
Peter Campbell is the London Review’s resident designer and art critic.
Jerry Fodor is collaborating with Massimo Piattelli-Palamarini on a book about evolution without adaptation.
James Hamilton-Paterson lives in Italy. His most recent novel, Cooking with Fernet Branca is published by Faber.
Rosemary Hill’s book about Pugin, God’s Architect, is out in paperback this summer.
Thomas Jones is one of the London Review’s contributing editors.
Jeremy Noel-Tod is about to start a PhD in modern poetry at Cambridge.
Adam Phillips’s Intimacies, written with Leo Bersani, is out now. A book on the pleasures of kindness, written with Barbara Taylor, is due in January.
Steven Shapin is the Franklin L. Ford Professor of the History of Science at Harvard. The Life of Science: A Moral History of a Late Modern Vocation will appear in the autumn.
Elaine Showalter is preparing a literary history of American women writers from 1650 to 2000.
William Skidelsky is an editor at the New Statesman.
Art Spiegelman’s In the Shadow of No Towers, which ran in the LRB from March to September 2003, is out from Viking.
Christopher Tayler lives in London.
Adam Thorpe’s fifth collection of poems, Birds with a Broken Wing, is due in May.