David Eastwood, vice-chancellor, University of Birmingham, is reading Tom Bower鈥檚 No Angel: The Secret Life of Bernie Ecclestone (Faber, 2012). 鈥淗ere Bower is kinder to his subject than in his previous biographies, perhaps because we all know that Ecclestone is no angel. Bower鈥檚 challenge is thus explaining his extraordinary character and influence in making Formula 1 immeasurably more commercial and safer than it was. One is left wondering uneasily whether it was a greater sport when it was neither.鈥

John Gilbey, who lectures in IT service management at Aberystwyth University, is reading Fridtjof Nansen鈥檚 Farthest North (Skyhorse Publishing, 2008). 鈥淭his is Nansen鈥檚 account of his 1893-96 expedition in the Fram, a research ship designed to be deliberately frozen into the Arctic pack ice in an attempt to get the expedition as far north as possible. Almost unbelievably, when they realised they would not drift any closer to the Pole, the Norwegian explorer and part of his team set out by sledge to head even further north 鈥 a journey fraught with danger that would last well over a year. The tale of a key voyage of scientific discovery, and a highly eventful one, recounted in a聽low-key but highly involving way.鈥

Liz Gloyn, lecturer in Classics, Royal Holloway, University of London, is reading Sylvia Townsend Warner鈥檚 Lolly Willowes (Virago, 2012). 鈥淭his 1926 novel tells the story of Laura Willowes and her life of domestic dependence as a maiden aunt. Eventually she escapes to the small village of Great Mop in the Chilterns, despite her family鈥檚 surprise and disapproval, and discovers an entirely new life for herself. Warner critiques the limited opportunities for single women and offers a mischievous alternative.鈥

Roger Luckhurst, professor of English at Birkbeck, University of London, is reading Writing History in the Age of Biomedicine (Yale University Press, 2013) by Roger Cooter with Claudia Stein. 鈥淐ooter is cross with the state of History. This is a career-spanning collection of essays by the historian of science from the 1970s to the present, with a jeremiad of an introduction that will provoke lively debate. Has evolutionary biology trumped the humanities with a new raid on cultural authority? Are the humanities truly doomed?鈥

Judie Newman, professor of American studies at the University of Nottingham, is reading Arturo P茅rez Reverte鈥檚 The Siege (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2013). 鈥淐谩diz 1811: Latin America fighting for its independence, the Spanish fighting for their lives, the French at聽the gates and a serial killer on the loose. P茅rez Reverte recreates a whole world through unforgettable characters, notably Lolita Palma, a lone woman running the family merchant house. History, adventure and philosophy. Unless your Spanish runs to terms of a nautical nature, this is best read in translation.鈥
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