The Battle for Britain’s First Book of the Month Club
Britain’s first book-of-the-month club – the Book Society – brought reading to a vast new audience. But not without some controversy.
Britain’s first book-of-the-month club – the Book Society – brought reading to a vast new audience. But not without some controversy.
In Language and Social Relations in Early Modern England Hillary Taylor listens in the archives for the voices of ordinary people.
How did Swahili become an East African lingua franca? It was not by accident.
On 5 July 1852 the curtain was raised on Barney Barnato, one of the richest men in South Africa.
How to reform an ancient Greek tyrant? Plato’s final advice to Dionysius the Younger was not well received.
Long overshadowed by Lindbergh, The Big Hop: The First Non-Stop Flight Across the Atlantic and Into the Future by David Rooney returns Alcock and Brown to aviation's top flight.
In the early 20th century the prison population in England and Wales was in sharp decline, despite a rise in crime.
Poets across the ages have sought help with their writing – but AI bears no comparison with the divine.
The Writer’s Lot: Culture and Revolution in Eighteenth-Century France by Robert Darnton discovers a literary flowering in the shadow of the guillotine.
On 25 June 1922 Black activist Marcus Garvey found common cause with the Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.