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The Review - BOOKS
Published: 19 June 2008
 
Mr Whicher and a murder that shook Victorian England

In June 1870, three-year-old Saville Kent was found dead in an outhouse near his home. His throat had been slashed in a crime that sent shockwaves throughout the land, writes Piers Plowright


SOME time in the early hours... > more
 
Books
Lord Ramsbotham
Tale of sexual frustration told with Austen - Like precision
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November 1989: the collapse of the Berlin Wall saw the end of the Cold War
What went on inside Old Big 'Ead?
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Cherie and Tony enjoying a Chinese takeaway
'Portrait of the way we were
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Covent Garden Market
Stories cobbled together
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Defending freedom by fighting terror with a war on liberty - WHAT this book exposes about Guantanamo Bay and the War on Terror will terrify you... > more

The cat's out of the Bragg
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HE’S a great talker. On radio you hear his persistent questions and curiosity coming across on... > more

Love for a wonderful and terrible country
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ELAINE Feinstein has called her new book a novel. It is much more than that. It is a tapestry of poetry and politics and... > more

Now there’s really no excuse for holding on to ‘our’ marbles
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THIS book is not a new one; but while the text is identical to previous editions, new introductions by... > more

Do football neighbours hate each other just for kicks -
WE all know the best, the most thrilling, the most important local derby match of the football season is Arsenal... > more

Teenage mutant hero who's right up our street -
ACCIDENTALLY kicking a snooker table leg when aiming for a football is the closest Joe Craig has ever come to... > more

Mai, Lebanon's literary rebel - EVERY once in a while comes some one who embodies the spirit of a place. Mai Ghoussoub was one. Born in Lebanon in 1952... > more

Slings and 'arrers' of Justin Irwin's outrageous fortune
- HE was a high-flying executive in the charity world, but Justin Irwin’s intentions were clear the day he... > more

Bond writer's secret service to protect architectural heritage
- YOU won’t find it mentioned in the official For Your Eyes Only exhibition at the Imperial War... > more

Sky's no limit on a mission to the stars
- AT the bottom of every email that Anna Young sends out is the phrase: “Why do they say it is wrong that I am reaching for the... > more

UFOs and identifying flying fists and 'skins'
- THE culture clash between hippies, skinheads and black nationalists erupted in Camden Town in 1967. And it was... > more

Treading a path through the moral maze of Arab writing
- WRITING this novel left Egyp tian author Man soura Ez-Eldin wracked by doubts. Not just because it was... > more

Blunt message from Pinter has a sting in tail
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I AM Twenty People! edited by Mimi Khilvati and Stephen Knight (Enitharmon £8.95) is the latest Poetry School... > more

Adoring audience for a dark mind
- JODI Picoult is not quite an overnight sensation – she points out that she has been writing for 15 years – but her fame certainly... > more

Stories behind closed doors
- TO many people they are eyesores, signs of a decaying and decrepit city – London at its worst. But for photographer Paul Talling... > more

Hats off to a portrait of the city’s past
- THE men all wear hats and stare curiously at the camera, the lens still a novelty on the city streets of the mid-19th century. > more

Colourful life of Red Princess
- AS Sofka Zinovieff was mourning the death of her grandmother, she remembered a gift the ageing Russian who she had been... > more

Parliament’s grand designer
- WHILE many have heard of him, few people know exactly who Pugin was and what he did. Rosemary Hill’s book God’s Architect fleshes... > more

Leaving no Livingstone unturned
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THROUGHOUT 1980, Ken Livingstone’s busy assassination squad had me high in their sights. I was, my comrades... > more

The shadow boxing Naipaul refuses to pulls any punches
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IN his new book, A Writer’s People: Ways of Looking and Feeling – an unlikely potboiler – Nobel... > more

Extraordinary true life Deedes of legendary Boot of the Beast
- IN the obsessive ego culture of old Fleet Street (and probably new Fleet Street) where fantasy raced... > more

Did you know? A secret history for the Bard’s birthday
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The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare is the book with which to celebrate the Bard’s birthday this... > more

The Clerkenwell chronicles
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THAT great campaigner for the poor Wat Tyler took his followers to Clerkenwell in 1381, as did the early trade unionists, the Tolpuddle... > more

A genius that flowered in the trenches
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IF the First World War still has a terrible glamour about it, it could be said to lie in its poetry. We have heart-rending work by... > more

Stellar drinkers of England
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FERGUS Linnane has written a sharp, funny and interesting history of this great public pleasure of the English – drinking. We live in joyless... > more

Poetry: ‘Gossip’ and ‘Mismatched shoes’ written by ‘pigs’
- FOR the serious poet, art is anything but therapeutic,” said the Torriano poet Leah Fritz in the poetry... > more

How they’re sneaking the NHS into private hands - CONFUSE and Conceal is a clear exposition of what is happening to the NHS. > more

Tapping into mind of Sillitoe - MICHAEL Cullen is a womanising criminal, a con man with an eye for an easy score, a strip club enforcer, chauffeur for a gangland... > more

Last Post echoes from the trenches - I REMEMBER as a lad sitting in the pilot’s seat of a shot down Junkers 88 in a field outside the Spitfire station at RAF Wittering... > more

A trove of things that you may not know- THIS is a ragbag of riches of more than 5,500 entries. Here are just to give you a few samples. Did you know The Bell ...>more

Reading the fuzzy line between pornography and eroticism - SEX wasn’t something you talked about in nice Jewish households when I was growing up... > more

Cue for a television phenomenon -
I WAS at the 2001 Benson and Hedges Masters snooker final at a packed Wembley Arena. > more

Mystery of little Willie Starchfield -
EVERYONE knows about the tragic disappearance of Madeleine McCann and the brutal murder of Milly Dowler... > more
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