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Dear Lumpy, by Roger Mortimer - review

25 May 2013
Dear Lumpy Roger Mortimer and Louise Mortimer

Constable, pp.174, £12.99, ISBN: 9781472109279

After the success of Dear Lupin, Roger Mortimer finds himself facing something not normally experienced by former Guards officers who have been dead for more than 20 years — namely… Read more

Here and Now, by Paul Auster and J.M. Coetzee - review

18 May 2013
Here and Now: Letters 2008-2011 Paul Auster and J.M. Coetzee

Faber, pp.248, £20, ISBN: 9780571299263

In love, there is always one who kisses and one who offers the cheek. So too in the luckless genre of letters artificially exchanged for the purposes of publication. There’s… Read more

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‘A world dying of ugliness’

4 February 2012
Joseph Roth: A Life in Letters translated and edited by Michael Hofmann

Granta, pp.551, 25

Some writers’ lives are estimable, some enviable, some exemplary. And some send a shudder of gratitude down the spine that this life happened to somebody else. It isn’t necessarily about… Read more

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The truest man of letters

7 January 2012

In 1969 an author in his early thirties published his first book. The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters won the Duff Cooper prize, delighted the reading public,… Read more

Friends across the sea

17 December 2011
The Acceptance of Absurdity edited by John Saumarez Smith and Jonathan Kooperstein

Maggs Brothers, pp.126, 25

On 12 February 1952 the novelist Anthony Powell received a letter from a bookseller in New York. Robert Vanderbilt Jr was the proprietor of a couple of Manhattan bookstores and… Read more

A gimlet eye

10 December 2011
Jane Austen’s Letters edited by Deirdre Le Faye

OUP, pp.667, 25

We should be grateful to families which encourage the culture of writing letters, and equally vital, the keeping of them. Leopold Mozart, for instance, taught his son not only music… Read more

A serenely contented writer

3 December 2011
P.G. Wodehouse: A Life in Letters edited by Sophie Ratcliffe

Hutchinson, pp.602, 30

Beaming Sir Pelham Grenville Wodehouse, KBE, D.Litt. (Oxon), Mark Twain medallist and co-founder of the Hollywood Cricket Club (1881-1975), personified a rare oxymoron: he was a serenely contented writer. Shortly… Read more

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My Dear Hugh: Letters from Richard Cobb to Hugh Trevor-Roper and Others edited by Tim Heald

5 November 2011
My Dear Hugh: Letters from Richard Cobb to Hugh Trevor-Roper and Others edited by Tim Heald

Frances Lincoln, pp.240, 20

Richard Cobb had many good friends, among them Hugh Trevor-Roper, who kept letters, and so made this selection possible. There must be many more letters, since the author was an… Read more

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The Letters of Samuel Beckett: Volume II, 1941-56, edited by George Craig, Martha Dow Fehsenfeld, Dan Gunn and Lois More Overbeck

29 October 2011
The Letters of Samuel Beckett: Volume II, 1941-56 edited by George Craig, Martha Dow Fehsenfeld, Dan Gunn and Lois More Overbeck

CUP, pp.791, 30

The die was miscast from the start, more’s the pity. As we reach the halfway point in this massy four-volume edition of the letters of Samuel Beckett, I cannot stifle… Read more

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Dark art

22 January 2011

Shadow Catchers is an effective title, with its magical and occult associations, and a nice echo of body snatchers into the bargain. Shadow Catchers is an effective title, with its… Read more

Bad enemy, worse lover

11 December 2010
Saul Bellow: Letters Benjamin Taylor (ed)

Penguin Classics, pp.608, 30

Five years after his death, Saul Bellow’s literary reputation has yet to suffer the usual post-mortem slump, and publication of these lively letters should help sustain his standing. Five years… Read more

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Two of a kind

23 October 2010
Letters to Monica by Philip Larkin edited by Anthony Thwaite

Faber, pp.475, 22.50

They were ‘soulmates’ according to people who knew both of them. They were ‘soulmates’ according to people who knew both of them. The word has a double-edged quality; it may… Read more

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Young man on the make

28 August 2010
Under the Sun: The Letters of Bruce Chatwin Elizabeth Chatwin and Nicholas Shakespeare

Cape, pp.554, 25

We are not going to agree about Bruce Chatwin. The five books he published in his lifetime are, to some readers, magnificent works of art, setting out grand ideas about… Read more

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Before she was a novelist

10 February 2010
Iris Murdoch, A Writer at War: Letters and Diaries Peter J. Conradi

Short Books, pp.303, 16.99

‘It’s hard in letters quite to hit the mean between being earnest and sounding damn silly’ — as Iris Murdoch admits on page 205 of this book. ‘It’s hard in… Read more

Delight and horror

11 November 2009
Love to the Little Ones Louisa Lane Fox (editor)

Frances Lincoln, pp.303, 14.99

‘Everything that the lovingest of husbands can express to the best of wives, & love to the little ones, not forgetting the kicker in the dark,’ Jack Verney wrote to… Read more

Was he anti-Semitic?

11 November 2009
The Letters of T. S. Eliot, Volume I 1898-1922 Valerie Eliot and Hugh Haughton (editors)

Faber, pp.871, 35

The Letters of T. S. Eliot, Volume II, 1923-1925 Valerie Eliot and Hugh Haughton (editors)

Faber, pp.878, 35

Letters give us the life as lived — day-to-day, shapeless, haphazard, contingent, imperfect, authentic. Letters give us the life as lived — day-to-day, shapeless, haphazard, contingent, imperfect, authentic. That is… Read more

A literary gypsy

4 November 2009
J.G. Farrell in his Own Words: Selected Letters and Diaries Lavinia Greacen (editor)

Cork University Press, pp.480, 39 Euros

When Lavinia Greacen undertook her magisterial yet intimately sympathetic biography of James Gordon Farrell, she gained access to his diaries and many of his letters, especially love letters and letters… Read more

Surprising literary ventures

21 October 2009
Love Letters of a Japanese Marie Stopes

Love Letters of a Japanese begins: ‘These letters are real. Love Letters of a Japanese begins: ‘These letters are real. And like all real things they have a quality which… Read more

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More gossip with less art?

25 February 2009
The Letters of Samuel Beckett, 1929-40, Volume I Martha Dow Fehsenfeld and Lois More Overbeck

CUP, pp.781, 30

To say that this first volume of Samuel Beckett’s collected letters is a puzzle and a disappointment is to suggest that one might have had specific expectations of it. Where… Read more

The spice of danger

26 November 2008
From the Front Line: Family Letters & Diaries, 1900 to the Falklands & Afghanistan Hew Pike

Pen & Sword, pp.237, 19.99

From the Front Line: Family Letters & Diaries, 1900 to the Falklands & Afghanistan, by Hew Pike ‘Every man thinks meanly of himself for not having been a soldier,’ reckoned… Read more