Fiction and the Reading Public by Q.D. Leavis

Fiction and The Reading Public provoked fierce controversy when first published in 1932, and it has since come to be recognised as a classic in its field. In her fascinating study, Q D Leavis (http://mypages.surrey.ac.uk/eds1cj/qd-leavis-life-and-work.htm#lifeandwork) investigates what has happened to the public taste in the last three centuries and what effect this has had on both […]

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Dead Man’s Time

Prolific crime writer and film producer Peter James (http://www.peterjames.com/, and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_James_(writer)) has been publishing novels since 1981. He has been translated into 36 languages. His 2013 offering is Dead Man’s Time (The ninth book in the Detective Superintendent Roy Grace series). The summary goes as follows: A vicious robbery at a secluded Brighton mansion leaves its elderly

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Isaiah Berlin by John Gray

Berlin (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaiah_Berlin) was a colossus of a thinker bestriding the twentieth century. His unique intellectual contribution was the concept of value-pluralism. Allow the mellifluous tones of John Gray to give you a tour round Berlin’s mind, and in particular his ideas about agonistic liberalism. 240 pages in Princeton University Press paperback edition. ISBN 978-0691157429

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