The Madness of Crowds by Douglas Murray – brilliant and essential reading
Douglas Murray points to the things that rumble beneath the surface of our culture, those things which we all know but cannot approach for fear
Douglas Murray points to the things that rumble beneath the surface of our culture, those things which we all know but cannot approach for fear
“Is this a handbag that I see before me”? Excellent question, Thane of Glamis. You can get around to the bloody dagger stuff later in
For bibliophiles, Olivier Assayas’ new film is more aetiology than entertainment – despite its blithe marketing to the contrary. Aspiring novelists beware. Non-Fiction should have
When an author has written twenty-four novels, one should expect (and perhaps even hope) that they tread familiar ground with their twenty-fifth. Authors of this
“Can I get a ticket to Hawarden?” The bus driver looked at me in incomprehension. “Where?” “Hawarden. Where Gladstone’s Library is.” His face brightened. “Oh,
The new Sky Crime TV channel is entirely devoted to true crime documentaries. In a promotional blurb released on its website, Sky describes it as
Andrei Bely’s novel Petersburg was written amid the great cultural tensions and transformations of pre-Revolutionary Russia. Published in 1913, it is set during the run
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