Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
By 1939, the Right Book Club claimed 20,000 subscribers, in comparison with some 50,000 members of the Left Book Club and 5,000 of the National Book Association. On 3 November 1939, the humorist A. G. Macdonell replied to an invitation from Christina Foyle to join the Club, "I had no idea that there were twenty thousand members of the Right in ...
In 2007, The Remains of the Day was included in a Guardian list of "Books you can't live without" [10] and also in a 2009 "1000 novels everyone must read" list. [11] The Economist has described the novel as Ishiguro's "most famous book". [12] On 5 November 2019, the BBC News listed The Remains of the Day on its list of the 100 most influential ...
"Review of The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain. (Volume IV, 1557-1695)". Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies. 36 (2): 307– 308. doi:10.2307/4054235. ISSN 0095-1390. JSTOR 4054235. Vol. 5 Dixon, Rosemary (2010). "Review of The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, V: 1695-1830". The Review of English Studies.
John Freeth and his Circle or Birmingham Men of the Last Century - members of the Birmingham Book Club pictured in 1792 by John Eckstein.. The Birmingham Book Club, known to its opponents during the 1790s as the Jacobin Club due to its political radicalism, [1] and at times also as the Twelve Apostles, [2] was a book club and debating society based in Birmingham, England from the 18th to the ...
Ian Maxted (ed.), Exeter Working Papers in Book History "Publications". Bibliographical Society. 6 January 2013. (Includes works about history of books in the UK) BibSite – via Bibliographical Society of America. (Includes articles on UK book history) University of London’s Society of Bibliophiles; David Finkelstein; Alistair McCleery (eds.).
Two books in editions from the Left Book Club: In Search of the Millennium, by Julius Braunthal (1945), and On the Top of the World by L. Brontman (1938). The Left Book Club, founded in May 1936, was a key left-wing institution of the late 1930s and the 1940s in the United Kingdom.
The English Historical Review is a bimonthly peer-reviewed academic journal that was established in 1886 [1] and published by Oxford University Press (formerly by Longman). It publishes articles on all aspects of history – British , European , and world history – since the classical era .
This category is for stub articles relating to non-fiction history books about the United Kingdom or its predecessor states. You can help by expanding them. You can help by expanding them. To add an article to this category, use {{ UK-hist-book-stub }} instead of {{ stub }} .