Jul 12, 2018
We start this week with a review of the digital archive Gabriel García Márquez: An Inventory of His Papers at the Harry Ransom Center. Steven Hart believes this archive is a truly remarkable achievement for future research on Latin American culture and literature, and...
Jun 21, 2018
We begin this week with The Internationalists and Their Plan to Outlaw War, edited by Oona A. Hathaway and Scott J. Shapiro. Peter Yearwood believes this book fails as a work of history, bound up as it is with a deeply flawed and greatly overstated thesis (no. 2257)....
Jun 7, 2018
We begin this week with Susan Dunn-Hensley’s Anna of Denmark and Henrietta Maria: Virgins, Witches, and Catholic Queens. Aidan Norrie and the author discuss an interesting, if sometimes simplistic, reconsideration of these two queens (no. 2253, with response...
May 31, 2018
We begin this week with Railways and The Raj: How the Age of Steam Transformed India by Christian Wolmar. Aparajita Mukhopadhyay and Christian Wolmar discuss a history of Indian railways which attempts to straddle the world of academic monographs and popular history...
May 24, 2018
We begin this week with Advancing Empire: English Interests and Overseas Expansion, 1613-1688 by L. H. Roper. David Hope and the author discuss an accomplished book that has much to offer those interested in state formation, political economy, overseas trade, and the...