Andrew King, professor of English literature and literary studies, University of Greenwich, is reading Elinor Glyn as Novelist, Moviemaker, Glamour Icon and Businesswoman (Ashgate, 2014) by Vincent Barnett and Alexis Weedon. 鈥淢y students loved Glyn鈥檚 1907 novel Three Weeks when I set it this past year, so I was delighted when this book appeared. She is one of those authors, like Ouida, whose work is way beyond the pale of the canon 鈥 its dangerous shadow that we love to despise. The details of how Glyn arrived at the glamorous heights of Hollywood show just how canny such women were.鈥

R. C. Richardson, emeritus professor of history, University of Winchester, is reading W. G. Hoskins鈥 One Man鈥檚 England (BBC Publications, 1976). 鈥淭he work of a pioneer of local history, landscape history and much else, this book accompanied a successful television series and demonstrates Hoskins in action as a great communicator. Passion and prejudices are here in plenty; he was always forthright about what he liked and hated. But although he found modernisation and technology loathsome, an exception is made here for the Earth Station at Goonhilly, Cornwall, 鈥榦ne of the most marvellous sites in England鈥.鈥

Peter J. Smith, reader in Renaissance literature, Nottingham Trent University, is reading Graham Holderness鈥 Nine Lives of William Shakespeare (Continuum, 2011). 鈥淗olderness is excellent at showing how the bare facts of Shakespeare鈥檚 life have been augmented to produce legends that have hardened into 鈥榦rthodoxy鈥. But his most innovative contribution is that chapters are followed by fictional narratives in the style of Conan Doyle, Dan Brown, Hemingway and so on. My favourite is a Crusoe-meets-Gulliver travelogue set on the desert island of Bardolo, where King William is enthroned in a reconstructed Globe and the sacred book is The Complete Works of Shakespeare.鈥

Amanda Taylor, senior lecturer in social work, University of Central Lancashire, is reading Olive Stevenson鈥檚 Reflections on a Life in Social Work: A Personal & Professional Memoir (Hinton House, 2013). 鈥淪tevenson writes with conviction as a practitioner, an academic and, above all, as a human being. The messages are inspirational and will reach inside the soul of those for whom reflection is the default position. This text is the next to be read by as a part of a National Book Group in Social Work Education later this year.鈥

Sharon Wheeler, senior lecturer in journalism, University of Portsmouth, is reading Colin Forbes鈥 Cover Story (Pan, 1985). 鈥淚鈥檓 a sucker for books with journalist heroes, although Forbes鈥 thriller surely must have seemed dated when it was published 30 years ago, with its leaden dialogue, plotting by numbers, spiffing chaps and plucky gals. But there鈥檚 a quaint, old-fashioned charm to it as head spook Tweed potters around Europe trying to track down a defector. Strangely, top foreign correspondent Robert Newman never seems to write a story.鈥
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