There has been a great deal of institutional handwringing since the Australian writer Richard Flanagan won – and politely ...
In Gaza, parents have taken to writing their children’s names on their legs in black marker pen so, if the family is ...
Can a circle, a two-dimensional object, deepen as well as enlarge? Can the façade of a church be “toothsome”? These and ...
Mineke Schipper draws on a lifetime’s study of stories and proverbs across the world to chart the ways in which ideas about ...
Ever since Russia’s reannexation of Crimea in 2014, the international conversation has centred on the rival claims of Russia ...
The Philosophy of Translation begins with an anecdote. Damion Searls, at this point a young man pondering a career in ...
In Thrall was first published in 1982, when its author, Jane DeLynn was in her mid-thirties, but it is set in 1960s New York, ...
After retiring as co-editorial director of Publisher’s Weekly in 2014, Michael Coffey read almost nothing but books by or ...
For the past few months my Friday mornings have been romance marathons. Middle English romance, to be more precise, the ...
In his rollicking memoir A Pound of Paper (2002), the Australian writer John Baxter recalls being in a bookshop in Sydney one ...
This smartly presented story, the first in a dual language series that will feature international authors writing on aspects ...
Stepping out of his apartment block in Paris’s chic sixteenth arrondissement, the filmmaker Robert Bristol narrowly avoids ...