LRB Cover
Volume 39 Number 14
13 July 2017

LRB blog 11 July 2017

Adam Shatz
‘The Bureau’

10 July 2017

Hugh Pennington
Resident Pathogens

7 July 2017

Francesca Wade
Out of the Bloomsbury Mud

MOST READ

12 October 1989

John Bayley
Little Green Crabs

29 June 2017

Tom Crewe
Labour’s Best Cards

17 November 2011

Hugh Roberts
Who said Gaddafi had to go?

In the next issue, which will be dated 27 July, Owen Hatherley on Jane Jacobs, Tom Penn on the making of Tudor England, Bee Wilson on the talking mongoose.

follow the London Review of Books on Twitter
Follow us on Twitter

William Davies

Reasons for Corbyn

The coincidence of the Corbyn surge with the horror of Grenfell Tower has created the conditions – and the demand – for a kind of truth and reconciliation commission on forty years of neoliberalism. It is too simple to cast Corbyn as a throwback, but it is undeniable that his appeal and his authority derive partly from his willingness to cast a different, less forgiving light on recent history, so that we don’t have to carry on repeating it. More

Daniel Trilling

The Refugee Crisis

All of the pressures that result from international migration are also generated by migration within a country’s borders. Linguistic and cultural differences, scarce public resources, unequal distribution of wealth: all of these exist within as well as between nation-states. So why limit controls to international borders? Why not prevent people from Solihull moving to London and putting pressure on the rental market? More


Namara Smith

‘Priestdaddy: A Memoir’

It’s a mistake to take Lockwood’s cuteness at face value. The rites and symbols she holds up for ridicule – the solemn processions, the incense, the swords, feathers, tufts and robes – are not only ornamental; they are what transform her father from a man who eats pork rinds in his underwear and washes his legs with Palmolive washing-up liquid into an object of collective veneration. More

David Bromwich

The Age of Detesting Trump

Impeachment is not something to count on. ‘Foreign emoluments’ is the most plausible charge, but the phrase has a distant sound and one of the words will need explaining. And yet, the idea of a left-liberal-engineered overthrow of Trump, assisted by the intelligence community and lawyers of great genius, has a tremendous, unquenchable charm for the media. More

At the Movies
Michael Wood

Short Cuts
Simon Wren-Lewis

In Cardiff
Julian Bell


LATEST AUDIO AND VIDEO

AUDIO Don’t Marry a Bohemian

Andrew O'Hagan

Rosemary Hill on the letters of Ida John. Listen »

More audio »

VIDEO David Jones

David Jones

Thomas Dilworth on the poet, painter and engraver. Watch »

More video »


FROM THE ARCHIVE