7The
London Review of Books has grown, over four decades, into Europe's leading magazine of culture and ideas, but it began life - in the words of its founding editor, Karl Miller - as just "a small paper". This wonderful selection of
previously unseen literary artifacts - both from archives and personal collections - will offer intimate insights into both the evolution of the journal and its relationships with our era's most celebrated thinkers and writers. From handwritten first drafts and (extensively) rewritten editorial spreads to reader complaints and iconic cover artwork - via the personal notebooks and correspondence in which publishing triumphs and disasters played out - this patchwork history brings a unique slice of Bloomsbury's modern heritage to life. With new introductions by Mary-Kay Wilmers and editor-at-large Andrew O'Hagan - and other famous protagonists from the paper's past and present - this is the perfect celebration of the
LRB's last forty years. Featuring legendary authors (such as Angela Carter, Bruce Chatwin, Seamus Heaney, Christopher Hitchens, Doris Lessing, Oliver Sacks, Edward Said, and Susan Sontag) alongside heroic letter-writers unlikely contributors (Tony Blair, believe it or not), this magnificent full-color hardback is a must-have for literature lovers everywhere.