糖心Vlog

Harriet Dunbar-Morris, Ivor Gaber, Barbara Graziosi, Constantine Sandis and Sharon Wheeler...

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Published on
July 24, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Harriet Dunbar-Morris, executive officer to the vice-chancellor, University of Bradford, is reading Charlotte Rogan鈥檚 The Lifeboat (Virago, 2013). 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 sure about a tale set entirely within the confines of a lifeboat: would the story be as restricted as the protagonists? Not at all. This book had me turning the pages and staying awake well past my bedtime in order to find out what happened to the main character. Grace grows throughout her three-week ordeal and brings the reader with her, whether or not one feels sympathy for her. Read it on your commute鈥rovided you don鈥檛 commute by boat!鈥

Book review: Interesting Times: A Twentieth-Century Life, by Eric Hobsbawm

Ivor Gaber, professor of journalism, University of Sussex, is reading Eric Hobsbawm鈥檚 Interesting Times: A Twentieth-Century Life (Abacus, 2003). 鈥淗obsbawm鈥檚 life is almost as epic as his historical writings. He spent his formative years in 鈥楻ed Vienna鈥 (soon to become Nazi-occupied Vienna). He made his way to England as a Communist and never lost that conviction. But he did grow increasingly hostile to the practice of Communism as it unfolded in the Soviet Union. This is a memoir written with all the passion and erudition one would expect from Hobsbawm, and also with a deep sense of humanity and humility. An uplifting and enlightening read.鈥

Book review: Scum of the Earth, by Arthur Koestler

Barbara Graziosi, professor of Classics, Durham University, is reading Arthur Koestler鈥檚 Scum of the Earth (Eland, 2006). 鈥淎fter the last European elections, I felt the need for strong medicine. Koestler鈥檚 book, which was first published in 1941, provides just that. It tells the story of Koestler鈥檚 imprisonment in France, together with other antifascist exiles (rebranded 鈥榰ndesirable aliens鈥). It explains the mechanisms of xenophobia but also 鈥 and more importantly 鈥 the international history of the European Left.鈥

Book review: Essays and Reviews 1959-2002, by Bernard Williams

Constantine Sandis, professor of philosophy, Oxford Brookes University, is reading Bernard Williams鈥 Essays and Reviews 1959-2002 (Princeton University Press, 2014). 鈥淭his collection not only reveals Williams as a masterful man of letters but also serves as a reminder that the thought of a nonsystematic thinker is often best understood through his or her responses to the work of others and the sociopolitical fabric of their time. I cannot recommend this volume highly enough to anyone interested in what the humanities have to offer.鈥

Book review: Molesworth, by Geoffrey Willans and Ronald Searle

Sharon Wheeler, senior lecturer in journalism, University of Portsmouth, is reading Molesworth (Penguin, 2000) by Geoffrey Willans and Ronald Searle. 鈥淚f you are of 鈥 ahem 鈥 a certain age, one mention of 鈥榓s any fule kno鈥 will have you tittering loudly and reciting other choice morsels from the anarchic brain of Molesworth, an unwilling inmate at St Custard鈥檚 school. This edition compiles all four of the books. And the 1950s humour (no, I鈥檓 not that old!) hasn鈥檛 dated a jot.鈥

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