Lawrence Black is senior lecturer in the department of history, Durham University. He is reading the second edition of Callum Brown鈥檚 鈥減rovocative鈥 The Death of Christian Britain (Routledge, 2009) and Simon Gunn鈥檚 鈥渆xcellent鈥 History and Cultural Theory (Longman, 2006). He has just started reading Jon Lawrence: Electing our Masters (Oxford University Press, 2009) and just finished Joseph O鈥橬eill: Netherland (Fourth Estate, 2008).
Roy Harris is emeritus professor of general linguistics, University of Oxford. He is reading John Dupr茅: Darwin鈥檚 Legacy (Oxford University Press, 2003). 鈥淚 am reading it because after my recent book, Rationality and the Literate Mind, I am now writing a kind of sequel which will probably be called Science and Scepticism. Dupr茅 interests me because, unlike most of those coasting along on the current media wave of adulation for Darwin, he gives a very critical account of Darwin and Darwinism. It seems to me that, although the theory of evolution is often presented as one of the triumphs in the history of science, when you examine it in detail it turns out to be very 鈥榰nscientific鈥 indeed.鈥
Richard Evans is Regius professor of modern history and chairman of the faculty of history, University of Cambridge. He is reading S枚nke Neitzel: Abgeh枚rt: Deutsche Gener盲le in Britischer Kriegsgefangenschaft 1942-1945 (List Taschenbuch Verlag, 2007) 鈥 鈥渁 640-page edition of transcripts of conversations between high-ranking officers of the Wehrmacht, recorded by hidden microphones in the prisoner-of-war camp at Trent Park鈥.
Bob Blaisdell is associate professor of English, Kingsborough Community College, City University of New York. 鈥淚鈥檓 reading Max Schott: Keeping Warm: Essays and Stories (John Daniel, 2004). Schott was a rodeo cowboy who went back to university and became a writer and teacher. He writes on literature (in this book Chaucer, Austen, Dr Johnson and William Carlos Williams) with a reader鈥檚 and a writer鈥檚 attention and appreciation. He also writes casual and personal essays as well as anyone I鈥檝e read.鈥
Joanna Lewis is lecturer in international history, London School of Economics. She is reading Nonica Datta: Violence, Martyrdom and Partition: A Daughter鈥檚 Testimony (Oxford University Press, 2009) 鈥 鈥淎 wonderful history, and Datta writes with such compassion, honesty and intricacy. This is the life story of an extraordinary, ordinary Indian woman who lived through and beyond the violence of Indian independence and partition. It is a humbling read.鈥
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