Peter Paul Catterall, reader in history, University of Westminster, is reading John Blundell鈥檚 Waging the War of Ideas (Institute of Economic Affairs, 2007). 鈥淔or those who denounce neoliberalism without seemingly having read any, this is a useful introduction. Much that is touted as neoliberal is merely pro-business, sometimes creating rather than breaking those conspiracies against the public known as cartels. It is the distortions of markets by self-interested actors, including governments, that is pernicious rather than the existence of markets themselves.鈥

Laurence Coupe, visiting professor of English, Manchester Metropolitan University, is rereading Morris Berman鈥檚 The Reenchantment of the World (Cornell University Press, 1981). 鈥淚t鈥檚 30 years since I last read this, and it seems more relevant than ever. Berman outlines the 鈥榙isenchantment鈥 that set in with 鈥榯he Cartesian paradigm鈥 鈥 separating mind from body, humanity from nature, knower from known. We need, he says, to rediscover the holistic vision of animism, the earliest form of religion. But 鈥榬eenchantment鈥 cannot be a simple return, and he makes a convincing case for ecology as the unifying model for our era.鈥

Timothy Darvill, professor of archaeology, Bournemouth University, is reading Harry Karlinsky鈥檚 The Stonehenge Letters (The Friday Project, 2014). 鈥淜arlinsky takes us back to the years following Alfred Nobel鈥檚 death and the challenges facing those charged with setting up the Nobel prizes. A secret codicil to his will seemingly established an additional prize, exclusively for Nobel laureates, to go to the person who solved the mystery of Stonehenge. Wrapped around an account of academic diplomacy by those associated with awarding the prize, we are treated to submissions from Kipling, Roosevelt, Pavlov and Curie, a peer review from Einstein, and the deliberations of the committee. A neat mix of fact and fiction, woven together with 20:20 hindsight.鈥

Paul Greatrix, registrar, University of Nottingham, is reading Julian Cope鈥檚 One Three One: A Time-Shifting Gnostic Hooligan Road Novel (Faber, 2014). 鈥淎n absurd trip around Sardinia and back in time for an ageing druggy rock star looking to settle scores from his previous visit during Italia 90. A local driver keeps him on track on Highway 131 as he hunts for ancient doorways to previous times. Music, drugs, gang warfare, football and Gnosticism add up to a bonkers but quite compelling novel.鈥

Nigel Rodenhurst, part-time lecturer in English, Aberystwyth University, is reading Paul Auster鈥檚 Report from the Interior (Faber, 2013). 鈥淎n uninspiring life story told in an uninspired way. In his ninth non-fiction book, Auster once again demonstrates his inability to consider that the general reader will not be as impressed by him as he is by himself. Once idolised by those inflamed by anything 鈥榚xperimental鈥, Auster鈥檚 constant attempts at self-canonisation may ironically achieve the exact opposite.鈥
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