59 results
Search Results
2. Dollar diplomacy: How the greenback became an instrument of coercion.
3. PAPER IN MEDIEVAL ENGLAND: From pulp to fictions.
4. Sketches from life: A history of the notebook and its owners, from Florentine merchants to Bob Dylan.
5. THE BRAMALL PAPERS: Reflections on war and peace.
6. PRECIOUS PAPER.
7. Pulp fiction: Engaging with God, sex and paper-making.
8. The jewel in James Irs crown: The sophisticated stories of Henry James's middle period.
9. Manuscript men.
10. Best-laid plans: Afghanistan did not fail for lack of strategies.
11. How it really was: A BBC journalist is gripped by the papers his mother left behind.
12. Donne's discretion.
13. GOOD ON PAPER.
14. Love, in lines unmusical: The literary and romantic relationship between Iris Murdoch and Brigid Brophy.
15. Enter, reading: The man who met Shakespeare on the page.
16. We have our papers too: Writing as an act of resistance.
17. Fraught, uncanny days: Walks through the locked-down Chilterns.
18. Losing their head.
19. Life less lonely: How a composer saw himself.
20. Uncanny Elizabethan autofiction: Two ways of understanding early modern personhood.
21. TREES.
22. A whole world out of paper: A new, upbeat retelling of Dickens's most autobiographical story.
23. Unhappy as we are: Chekhovian tales of provincial Russian inertia.
24. Hidden costs.
25. The head of the firm: Rescuing the reputation of a gifted painter.
26. Spiders as big as geese: The man behind the ‘museum of a virtuoso’.
27. Up and away.
28. Imprisoning the light: History of the photograph as cultural object.
29. Pigs in the forest.
30. Love the bomb: Debates about conflicts that have not yet happened.
31. Your papers, please: Questions of movement within the Soviet Union.
32. Face that passed for Piety.
33. Silkpunk tears of things.
34. Such a vicious Donald Duck.
35. Love and uglier feelings.
36. Still Orwell's England? The writer as 'moral litmus paper'.
37. Blank sheet: How to recover from abuse by putting words to work.
38. Composed of money.
39. Governing class.
40. League of his own.
41. Pulp non-fiction.
42. Fiction.
43. Memoirs.
44. French Literature.
45. Laws of motion.
46. Putting a city down on paper: Joining the ‘pedestrian literature’ of Paris.
47. You've got Mail.
48. Scraps of paper: Unearthed tales and sketches by Kipling.
49. Pouring his testimony onto paper: An artist of slavery once dismissed as primitive.
50. Infernal jubilations: Werner Herzog on paper: 'inspired, individual, mad' - and also patient and receptive.
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