This week, Thea Lenarduzzi and Lucy Dallas are joined by Gerri Kimber to discuss a bold new biography of D. H. Lawrence, 'the most judged writer of his age'; twenty-odd writers share their formative encounters with nature, including the novelists Maaza Mengiste and Ali Smith; plus, reviews of the television adaptation of Nancy Mitford’s 'The Pursuit of Love' and 'Harm', a new play about loneliness and social media addiction
Burning Man: The ascent of D. H. Lawrence, by Frances Wilson
'Sinister, sublime, exhausting, hungry – formative encounters with the natural world', see the-tls.co.uk
The Pursuit of Love by Nancy Mitford, BBC iPlayer
'Harm' by Phoebe Eclair-Powell, the Bush Theatre, London
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Patronizing writers of colour
Scavenger of eternal truths
Unsettled by Sontag
The recipe for superstardom
Is it too late?
What do the kids say?
'We should all be interested in pigeons...'
The most expensive mystery of all
How to be modern: conspiracy theory, free will and the avant-garde
‘We don’t know what he has, we don’t know what he’s done with it’
Nature for sale
Unromancing the Romantics
Loving Iris Murdoch
Who reads John Updike?
Talk to the hands
Summer Books 2019
Russian greats and fictional eats
Ethical economics
Weighty matters
Celestial Bodies – winner of the 2019 Man Booker International prize for fiction
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