Michael Caines on the little-known romantic William Gilbert, a “man of fine genius” (according to William Wordsworth) who had “unfortunately received a few rays of supernatural light through a crack in his upper story”; Daniel Beer tells the tale of the Gulag at Solovki, a converted monastery known as “the Paris of the Northern concentration camps”, a place of brutality but also of resistant culture and ideas; finally, Laurence Scott considers the cultural history of shoeshining, from Dickens to Police Squad
Books
William Gilbert and Esoteric Romanticism by Paul Cheshire
Intellectual Life and Literature at Solovki, 1923–1930: The Paris of the northern concentration camps by Andrea Gullotta
Better to Travel Hopefully
Super Furry Animals
Power Plays
Unjust Deserts
Time Past and Time Future
Illustrated Men
O Pioneers!
Between The Sheets
A Worm’s-eye View
Revivals
Cometh the Hour
Flights of Fantasy
In Conversation with Richard Sennett
All the World's a Stage
Splendid Isolation
Class Struggles
Energy Creation
Out Of Our Minds
Turning Leaves: Dame Penelope Lively and Josephine Lively
A Cure for Twixmas
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The Modern West
Voices of Misery Podcast
House of Whimsical Terror
Just Dumb Enough Podcast
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