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London Review of Books: An Incomplete History

London Review of Books: An Incomplete History

On Friday 25 October, theĀ LRBĀ turned 45. (OurĀ first ever issueĀ was dated 25 October 1979.) A big 45th birthday isn’t a thing, so here instead is a small gesture: 45% off the lavish volume we produced with Faber to mark our 40th anniversary in 2019,Ā London Review of Books: An Incomplete History – now even more incomplete!Ā 

To mark the fortieth birthday of the London Review of Books, we scoured our archives, personal collections and forgotten filing cabinets to bring you the best of the paper’s history. This selection of letters, drawings, postcards, field notes and typescripts, from contributors including Alan Bennett, Angela Carter, Oliver Sacks, Edward Said, Richard Rorty and Jenny Diski – plus the occasional prime minister and Nobel prize-winner – are accompanied by stories fromĀ LRBĀ writers and editors, as well as introductory essays by Mary-Kay Wilmers and Andrew O’Hagan. The result is an intimate account of four decades of intellectual life and a testament to the power of print – and well-edited sentences – in the new information age.

$16.53

Original: $47.22

-65%
London Review of Books: An Incomplete History—

$47.22

$16.53

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On Friday 25 October, theĀ LRBĀ turned 45. (OurĀ first ever issueĀ was dated 25 October 1979.) A big 45th birthday isn’t a thing, so here instead is a small gesture: 45% off the lavish volume we produced with Faber to mark our 40th anniversary in 2019,Ā London Review of Books: An Incomplete History – now even more incomplete!Ā 

To mark the fortieth birthday of the London Review of Books, we scoured our archives, personal collections and forgotten filing cabinets to bring you the best of the paper’s history. This selection of letters, drawings, postcards, field notes and typescripts, from contributors including Alan Bennett, Angela Carter, Oliver Sacks, Edward Said, Richard Rorty and Jenny Diski – plus the occasional prime minister and Nobel prize-winner – are accompanied by stories fromĀ LRBĀ writers and editors, as well as introductory essays by Mary-Kay Wilmers and Andrew O’Hagan. The result is an intimate account of four decades of intellectual life and a testament to the power of print – and well-edited sentences – in the new information age.