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Contents
Vol. 22 No. 17 · 7 September 2000
Michael Wood: Conversations with Don Luis
- An Unspeakable Betrayal: Selected Writings of Luis Buñuel translated by Garrett White
Michael Cox, Patricia Craig, Colm Tóibín, Leonard Pepper, Anne Summers, Gordon Kerry, Eleanor Cooke, Gilberto Perez, Edgar Ernstbrunner, Peter Robb, John Hort, Peter Dear, Rick Livingstone, J.G. Owen
Linda Colley on Margaret Thatcher
- Margaret Thatcher. Vol. I: The Grocer’s Daughter by John Campbell
Jenny Turner: Jeanette Winterson
- The PowerBook by Jeanette Winterson
James Wood: The Emaciation of Muriel Spark
- Aiding and Abetting by Muriel Spark
Thomas Jones
- The Justification of Johann Gutenberg by Blake Morrison
Steven Shapin: The Manhattan Project
- In the Shadow of the Bomb: Oppenheimer, Bethe and the Moral Responsibility of the Scientist by S.S. Schweber
- Atomic Fragments: A Daughter’s Questions by Mary Palevsky
Peter Berkowitz
- Virtue, Reason and Toleration: The Place of Toleration in Ethical and Political Philosophy by Glen Newey
Ian Jackman
- Irish America by Reginald Byron
- Remembering Ahanagran: Storytelling in a Family’s Past by Richard White
- From the Sin-é Café to the Black Hills: Notes on the New Irish by Eamon Wall
- The Encyclopedia of the Irish in America edited by Michael Glazier
Andrew Berry
- Nonzero: The Logic of Human Destiny by Robert Wright
John Sturrock
- Start of Play: Cricket and Culture in 18th-Century England by David Underdown
Gerald Hammond
- The David Story: A Translation with Commentary of 1 and 2 Samuel by Robert Alter
Gillian Darley
- Big Jim: The Life and Work of James Stirling by Mark Girouard
Patrick McGuinness
- Poems by J.H. Prynne
- Pearls that Were by J.H. Prynne
- Triodes by J.H. Prynne
- Other: British and Irish Poetry since 1970 edited by Richard Caddel and Peter Quartermain
Contributors
Peter Berkowitz teaches at George Mason University Law School. He is the author, most recently, of Virtue and the Making of the Modern.
Andrew Berry teaches evolutionary biology at Harvard.
Linda Colley is Shelby M.C. Davis 1958 Professor of History at Princeton University. Her latest book is The Ordeal of Elizabeth Marsh: A Woman in World History.
Gillian Darley’s Villages of Vision is published in a revised edition this month.
James Epstein teaches in the History Department at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee. He is the author of Radical Expression: Political Language, Ritual and Symbol in England.
Mark Ford’s collections of poetry are Landlocked and Soft Sift. He is a professor of English at University College London.
Louise Foxcroft is a graduate student at Cambridge, where she is finishing a PhD on addiction as a medical condition in the 19th century.
Gerald Hammond’s books include The Making of the English Bible and Fleeting Things: English Poets and Poems 1616-60. He is John Edward Taylor Professor of English Literature at the University of Manchester.
Ian Jackman lives in New York.
Thomas Jones is one of the London Review’s contributing editors.
Paul Laity edited the Left Book Club Anthology. Formerly an editor at the London Review, he now works at the Guardian.
Patrick McGuinness, a fellow of St Anne’s College, Oxford, is the author of Maurice Maeterlinck and the Making of Modern Theatre.
Steven Shapin is Franklin L. Ford Professor of the History of Science at Harvard. His new book, The Scientific Life: A Moral History of a Late Modern Vocation, was published in October.
John Sturrock is consulting editor at the London Review.
Jenny Turner’s novel The Brainstorm is out now in paperback.
Michael Wood teaches at Princeton. His most recent book is Literature and the Taste of Knowledge.
James Wood’s How Fiction Works is just out. He is also the author of The Broken Estate: Essays on Literature and Belief and is a staff writer at the New Yorker.