In Review tomorrow

Julian Barnes reflects on Frank O'Connor, a writer Yeats once called Ireland's Chekhov; David Lodge considers three passionate short stories by Henry James which shed light on his troubled sexuality; Decca Aitkenhead reports back from the Calabash festival in Jamaica, where the label 'Carribbean literature' has been causing a rumpus; Maya Jaggi meets the woman who launched Harry Potter. The book of the week is a shocking account of mass rape during the fall of Berlin, while Susan Hill calls for submissions for Long Barn Books. Read it all here, tomorrow.
  
  


Julian Barnes reflects on Frank O'Connor, a writer Yeats once called Ireland's Chekhov; David Lodge considers three passionate short stories by Henry James which shed light on his troubled sexuality; Decca Aitkenhead reports back from the Calabash festival in Jamaica, where the label 'Carribbean literature' has been causing a rumpus; Maya Jaggi meets the woman who launched Harry Potter. The book of the week is a shocking account of mass rape during the fall of Berlin, while Susan Hill calls for submissions for Long Barn Books. Read it all here, tomorrow.

 

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