Daniel Binney, postgraduate administrator, department of history, Classics and archaeology, Birkbeck, University of London, is reading Nietzsche on Art and Life (Oxford University Press, 2014), edited by Daniel Came. 鈥淚f only modernity knew what it risked in philistinism. This is a fine collection of subtle and coherent reflections on a major theme of Nietzschean obscurantism: mythologising the world through art to make it bearable. Rewarding, accessible and a nod to the prescriptivism of a philosopher often taken merely to be a Kulturkritik.鈥

George McKay, AHRC leadership fellow for the Connected Communities programme, University of Salford, is reading Andy Bennett鈥檚 Music, Style, and Aging: Growing Old Disgracefully? (Temple University Press, 2013). 鈥淐an you be a punk rocker without looking like one? If you鈥檙e in your fifties? With thinning hair that won鈥檛 stand up in a Mohican? Fiftysomething Bennett鈥檚 sparkling short study dispenses with nostalgia and looking your age and extends our understanding of youth music subcultures beyond youth. No future? Of course there is!鈥

Roger Morgan, former professor of political science, European University Institute, is reading Logie Bruce Lockhart鈥檚 Now and Then, This and That (Larks Press, 2013). 鈥淭he recollections and reflections of a remarkable headmaster. The author, following a University of Cambridge career marked by distinction in modern languages and rugby football, was appointed in his early thirties to the headship of the open-minded Gresham鈥檚 School. He ran it for several decades, and his frank thoughts on the management of teachers and teenagers (and on much else) should appeal to anyone concerned with education.鈥

Vanessa Pupavac, senior lecturer in international relations, University of Nottingham, is reading Henri Alain-Fournier鈥檚 The Lost Estate (Le Grand Meaulnes) (Penguin, 2007). 鈥 鈥楤ut can one return to the past?鈥 asks the young Fran莽ois. The First World War looms between us and Alain-Fournier, killed in 1914, and his lyrical 1913 novel of adolescent love in rural France. Yet the novel鈥檚 fatal enchantments testify to a cultural nihilism impatient with 鈥榣iving like everyone else鈥. 鈥業n death alone鈥 may perhaps recapture the beauty of that time.鈥 鈥

Sharon Wheeler, senior lecturer in journalism, University of Portsmouth, is reading Danny Rhodes鈥 Fan: A Novel (Arcadia, 2014). 鈥淚 remember exactly where I was on 15 April 1989, when 96 Liverpool supporters were killed and hundreds injured at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, and Rhodes鈥 bleak novel brings back at a sweep that grim era when football fans died at matches. This painfully compelling tale of a fan who, 20 years on, can never forget that day is like a relentless drumbeat inside your head; a silent scream demanding to be heard.鈥
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