Looking for ShakespeareReviews Double Falsehood, Brean Hammond (ed.), Arden Shakespeare, 464pp, £16.99 (paperback) Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare?, James Shapiro, Faber and…
Quiet RegretsReviews White Egrets, Derek Walcott, Faber and Faber, 89pp, £12.99 (hardback) ‘Another emblem there!’ W. B. Yeats exclaims in ‘Coole…
The Advantages of RepressionReviews E. M. Forster: A New Life, Wendy Moffat, Bloomsbury, 404pp, £25 Wendy Moffat’s subtitle, A New Life, refers both…
A Literary Cocktail: Remembering Alan RossFeaturesChristopher Sinclair-Stevenson A Literary Cocktail: Remembering Alan Ross It may seem perverse to start at the end, but…
The First Cut … A Short History of the Silhouette PortraitFeatures Viewed in their own heyday as temporary, of varying or poor quality and throwaway, it is no wonder that…
Makars of the Smoke – Eliot’s Anglo-Scot Precursors: Harold Monro, John Davidson and James ‘BV’ ThomsonFeatures Two of the most influential yet overlooked voices of British poetry from the Yellow Nineties to the Modernist Twenties…
The Birth of ImpressionismFeatures The hundred pictures from the Musée d’Orsay in the stunning ‘Birth of Impressionism’ exhibition at the de Young museum…
The Rediscovery of George CalderonFeatures When I was writing Critical Times, my history of the Times Literary Supplement, I discovered several brilliant reviewers for…
Multiple LivesFeatures I have always had mixed feelings about biographies: I have never greatly enjoyed reading them, far preferring memoirs and…
Talking to Ourselves in the Bates MotelFeatures Imagine if you played darts. Every time you went to the local pub the same gang was there, throwing…
Tin Plate Workers and Pearly Queens: notes on the sketchbook drawings of Ceri RichardsFeatures ‘I chose that particular tinplate works because I was a bit familiar with it – father worked there, and…
Phantasmagoria in Notting Hill: Arthur Machen’s Hill of DreamsFeatures It has variously been described as ‘without doubt the most decadent book in all of English literature’ and ‘the…
Mahler and the Music of the FutureFeatures By the accident of his dates of birth and death Mahler has provided us with two consecutive years by…
Holding Forth on Holding Back: How Food Has Been Shared Through the AgesFeatures The sight of dogs frantically inhaling their food is strangely hypnotic. Where more than one is present growling, yapping…
A Short Walk Down WhitehallFeatures Even on the ten thousandth occasion, a walk along Whitehall ought to remind one that history is now and…
Two PoemsPoetryShoes Her words might have been those of the Iraqi reporter when he cracked and hurled both of his shoes…
Two PoemsPoetryThe Exhumation of Lizzie Siddal A fire is lit beside the grave: Officers of the Court, the diggers, the poet’s…
Three PoemsPoetryI Gilgamesh At the Blasted Gates At the blasted gates Gilgamesh falls to his knees. ‘What now?’ he cries. His…
Two PoemsPoetryWithin Our Ken A bedroom scene where morning light insists through lace upon a strew of clothes; a bed, unmade,…
FigureheadPoetry Salt is how you taste and Tarred rope of frayed hair at Arm and groin as if I’m Swimming…
Three PoemsPoetryCatch 1. Grey Mullet Their mouths were small, lips too soft to tether a run, or bear their weight when…
Two Translated Poems by Sergey Esenin and Vladimir MayakovskyPoetry To most Anglophone readers Sergey Esenin (1895-1925) and Vladimir Mayakovsky (1893-1930) probably number among the less familiar Russian poets.…
RSVPPoetry The lost souls of avarice are in hell blessed, Rotating their tales in disfigured amusement. Those who bestow and…
Two PoemsPoetryA Fayum Portrait For Euphrosyne Doxiadis I saw you last night in Aromas, the taverna between garages at the end…