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The Review - BOOKS
Published: 13 December 2007
 
Hampstead Heath has become a popular spot for north Londoners to relax – but the area’s past remains unknown to many of us
Stories from the streets
where you live


Two new books reveal a hidden history of the borough’s people and places, writes Dan Carrier


THE figure of Britannia stares down forlornly at the four lanes of one-way traffic heading north along Camden High Street. > more
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Books
Postal workers had to take to the picket lines for better pay this summer
Warning: contains nuts
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 William Hogarth’s engraving Gin Lane, 1751
The gate to political wisdom
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Alan Coren: a stoic
Things that go bump backstage
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Hampstead Heath has become a popular spot for north Londoners to relax – but the area’s past remains unknown to many of us
When the Heath had a duel purpose
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Carving out science in Elizabethan London - THE best viewing platform to see a contemporary Tower of Babel from the temples of Mammon... > more

Capital crime and punishment
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SAMUEL Johnson observed there was “in London all that life can afford”; a charming slogan which Geoffrey Howse’s... > more

Portrait of the poet as a young man
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THERE is no doubt that Ezra Pound was one of the most important poets of the 20th century. > more

Terribly house and garden at number 7b
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IT was in the 1950s that Michael Flanders and Donald Swann sang that “The garden’s full of furniture / And the... > more

Rumpole and the Casanova casebook
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HE gave us Rum pole, that old rogue of a lawyer that millions of TV viewers fell in love with, because Rumpole... > more


Within these walls
- FORGET your castles and palaces full of antiquities – when it comes to finding out how people really lived, you can’t beat looking over... > more

A new inspector calls – in Ireland
- EVEN by the standards of crime novels, Paul Charles’s latest offering, The Dust of Death, has a gruesome opening. A Donegal...>more

The tenderness of wolves
- INTERVIEWED Ted Hughes at length in 1965 in The Queens pub on the corner of Regent’s Park Road, Primrose Hill. It was just two years ...>more

Why poetry was shelved for publishing
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NOVELIST Dame Beryl Bainbridge has regrets that make you want to cry. She hates the way she treated her mother, Winnie...>more

Return of Rachel, 25 years on
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RACHEL Waring is one of the oddest characters to grace contemporary literature. But author Stephen Benatar, whose novel Wish Her ...>more

Whitehorn’s memories are a woman’s own
- THE title of Kath arine Whitehorn’s book comes from a quotation by Jim Fiebig, the American gemstone jeweller. And it ..>more

Death of honest politics?
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WHEN a young, highly talented and prolific political journalist falls seriously out of love with his favoured subject it must be cause for..>more

Has our great train network gone off track?
- CAPITALIST free market buccaneers of the 19th cen tury would have blushed at today’s “botched” free-for-all privatisation... > more

Dyspeptic observations from a tripper to the Hebrides - AN unusual product of the MacNeice centenary is the reissue, almost 70 years after its first publication... > more

After 40 years, we’re still on Radio 4’s wavelength - REVOLUTION and counter-revolution, baronial struggles, regional discontent, suicides and palace coups... > more

Freud for thought - MENTION Sigmund Freud and the image most of us have of the father of psychoanalysis is of a stern, serious-faced man with a beard, something... > more

A poet’s life after a loved one’s death - WHEN Dannie Abse lost his wife in a horrific car crash two years ago, the future looked bleak. > more

Home truths on wanderlust - Watch out for Michael Palin next time you are on Hampstead Heath. He won’t be jogging up Parliament Hill, as he used to do from his... > more

Stars and Stripes are flagging - IN common parlance, Eurasia is the land mass straddling Europe and Asia. > more

A dark history of crime in Soho - AUTHOR Paul Willetts’ biography of the Soho novelist and raconteur Julian Maclaren-Ross was many literary critics’ book of the year...>more

‘Demise of unions has set us back to 19th century’
- WORKERS of the world unite. You have nothing to lose but your bling (elaborate and highly ostentatious jewellery ...>more

‘Lady Macbeth Cherie,’ flirty first lady of Downing Street
- OVERSHADOWED by the massive publicity surrounding the launch of Alastair Campbell’s diaries of ...>more

Tribute to Heath-Stubbs - NINE months after the death of the blind poet John Heath-Stubbs, a host of celebrated poets will congregate in St James’s Church... > more

How the young Joe went from peasant to Lenin’s fixer - STALIN, like Hitler, was an outsider. Born December 17 1877 as Josef Vissarionovitch Djugushvili... > more

An alternative agenda for Brown? - I’M at last convinced that history marches backward.In the 1880s the future Conservative Prime Minister Disraeli wrote... > more

The Guantanamo allotment – a distraction from torture
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FOR a guy who has had razor blades taken to his penis for five months he retains a fantastic sense of ...>more

Women stay true to the ideals of the beautiful game
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EVER dreamed you played for England? I have: about 600 times. Let me tell you, it was exhausting. Every ...>more

Red hot object of desire
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Alan Bate' s Women in Love (1969) – a cinematic exercise, viewed by some as homo-eroticism, which still sexually disturbs...>more

Anger that lost its focus
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COLIN Wilson an nounced in his early teens that he was a genius and has consistently insisted that to be true. Nevertheless, the ...>more

Poor sell: organism that’s to die for
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MITOCHONDRIA are small components in our cells and there may be hundreds in each cell. Their function is to provide the ...>more

Poems for the child that lies within -
MIMI Khalvati was born in Tehran, grew up on the Isle of Wight, and trained at the Drama Centre in Kentish Town. She is a well-loved...>more

Jewel in the crown of the last White Rajah
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IT is not generally realised that the British Empire was at its greatest extent after the Second World War... > more

Heavy tread into virgin territory
- THIS is half a book, and a remarkable novella as such – one that examines in detail all the elements of love and lust on a honey moon ...>more

In search of strangers -
THE novelist Evelyn Waugh once created a fictional young woman prone to travel, who would send back cryptic postcards from exotic places. ...>more

Thoughts for the day on a brave bishop -
HERE are many paradoxes that lie unsolved in this insightful biography of Richard Harries, the recently retired ...>more

A half life lost inside the Shelley closed circle -
POOR Fanny Wollstonecraft. We don’t even know what she looked like; only the off-hand remarks... > more

Letters from a poet’s heart
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HE was small, modest, shy, the apologetic son of pathetically poor immigrants from Lithuania. The handful of books about... > more

Inside the mind of a lyrical iconoclast
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LEAVING Shakespeare out we must sometimes ask: “Who is the greatest English poet?” In considering... > more

It was the best of times and the worst of times
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CHRISTOPHER Barker is the son of the writer Elizabeth Smart and the notorious poet, George Barker... > more

The ‘celebrities’ who went back for more
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WHAT is it that makes people so brilliantly brave and oblivious of danger when their country is engulfed by war... > more

Sixty, and still single
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ON August 15, India will celebrate the 60th anniversary of independence from Britain. To the surprise and satisfaction... > more

One man’s comedy of terrors
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IS it journalism or stand-up? The political activist Mark Thomas’s show blurs the boundaries to great effect... > more

Step-by-step guide to making a movie
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MAKING a movie was once an elitist, prohibitively expensive activity that the average person could only dream of... > more

Republican Foot, the admirer of the Queen -
Vanessa, his terrier dog, regularly sat on the back seat of the chauffeur-driven car when Michael Foot left Whitehall... > more

Sir Sydney’s garden for the gardenless
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THE party was a knees-up fit for the newly crowned king. Scantily clad satyrs danced around a fountain that had... > more

John Major’s ‘slush puppy for the very rich’
- PRIME ministers and cooking prove to be a recipe for disaster in Peter Gladwin’s entertaining new cookery book... > more

Thatcher’s children - AS someone who was a member of all Margaret Thatcher’s Cabinets, I was naturally fascinated to read Simon Jenkins’ book. > more

A pictorial history of St Joan’s theatre workshop -
A BLEAK November day in 1953 in Stratford, east London, heralded a momentous day in the theatrical and... > more

Pick up a Penguin, or a Bob Dylan...
- PETER Stothard is the former editor of The Times and the current editor of the Times Literary Supplement. He is also on the... > more

Michael’s fantasy island for kids and grown-ups
- IT is perhaps not surprising to find one of our greatest children’s writers has shared his home with hundreds of... > more

The last of the fierce, individual history boys
- THE last time I saw him he was hurrying down Hampstead Road looking more than ever like the White Rabbit in the... > more

Funnyman Griff’s journey to his past
- IT is remarkable how objective history is, says Griff Rhys Jones. “It is an obvious point,” he says, “but one which really came... > more

The women who are far from veiled
- IF you believe what you read then you probably imagine Arab women are quiet victims of oppressive, hopelessly... > more

Who’s ever heard of Mr Virginia Woolf? - THE only time I met the famous art critic Kenneth Clark (Lord Clark of Civilisation), he told me that for him there were... > more

The twelve days which shook Victor’s world - HUNGARY and Hampstead play a vital role in the life of Victor Sebestyen. It was in Budapest that he was born... > more

The enigma that was Katharine Hepburn - WE were sitting in the Californian sunshine, Spencer Tracy and I, in orange canvas chairs outside a Bel-Air mansion... > more

Send in the clowns – but no elephants - ONCE upon a time there was a circus, which had no performing animals apart from a duck who would quack to the sound... > more

Romeo and Juliet who fled the Nazis in a boat - MICHAEL Arditti did not set out to write a parable. But his new novel A Sea Change is more than just a love story. > more

A true free spirit of the Middle East - BOMBS over Beirut, bullets across Baghdad: Abdelrahman Munif must be wailing in his grave. > more

Victorian masses and leisure principle - THE consumer society, says Judith Flanders, starts here. With the Great Exhibition of 1851. It was launched, to the... > more

The dutiful daughter of our greatest writer - SHE was the third child of ten, the second daughter of England’s greatest novelist and social campaigner... > more
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