The jokey nature The Growth Delusion is at odds with its serious economic arguments
Each chapter of David Pilling’s book begins with a wearily cheery anecdote.
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New Times,
New Thinking.
Each chapter of David Pilling’s book begins with a wearily cheery anecdote.
ByOn the surface Crace’s language seems for the most part unadorned, but the adornment here is in the melody of…
ByThe book terminates at the 200-page mark, just as the band receive their first hysterical reviews.
BySight would have been a stunning realist novel in its own right, without all the additional historical material.
By“I was always utterly elsewhere,” writes Mangnan, as she navigates Harry Potter, Goodnight Mister Tom and The Hungry Caterpillar.
ByBy the 1860s Dostoevsky had been orphaned, imprisoned, conscripted and widowed. Lumbered with debts and immersed in the nihilism of…
ByFeel Free: Essays shows the limitations of a star literary career – and the freedom of a remarkable critical mind.
ByGraham Robb’s The Debatable Land and Rory Stewart’s The Marches dig into the history and culture of the borderlands.
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