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  2. The 20 best books of the year, ranked - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/20-best-books-ranked-115622759.html

    Andrew O’Hagan’s majestic new state-of-the-nation novel Caledonian Road is set over one explosive year and divided into five sections – spring, summer, autumn, winter and realisation – and ...

  3. Andrew O'Hagan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_O'Hagan

    Book Reviews: "Racing against reality" The New York Review of Books 54/11 (28 June 2007): 4–8 [review of Don DeLillo, Falling Man] "Run" Publishers Weekly Fiction Reviews: Week of 16 July 2007. Review of Run by Ann Patchett. [34] The Satoshi Affair: Andrew O’Hagan on the many lives of Satoshi Nakamoto (2016, non-fiction) [16]

  4. ‘Blue Road: The Edna O’Brien Story’ Review: Well-Timed Doc ...

    www.aol.com/blue-road-edna-o-brien-150000375.html

    Having other writers analyze O’Brien’s writerly qualities helps: Witness Andrew O’Hagan (Caledonian Road) popping up to observe how “embracing ambivalence and uncertainty, trying to ...

  5. Housmans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housmans

    A window display at Housmans circa 1990 unearthed by the 5 Cally Road research project. In the 1980s, a partial demolishment of Caledonian Road was proposed, but the trustees of Housmans refused to sell the building to developers. [33] [53] In 1985, trustees of Peace News established a retail store named Peacemeal Wholefoods opposite Housmans ...

  6. John Carr (travel writer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Carr_(travel_writer)

    In 1808 there appeared Caledonian Sketches, or a Tour through Scotland in 1807, reviewed by Sir Walter Scott in the Quarterly Review; and in 1811 Descriptive Travels in the Southern and Eastern parts of Spain and the Balearic Isles in the year 1809. Carr was also the author of: [1] The Fury of Discord, a poem, 1803;

  7. Flying Scotsman, Kings Cross - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Scotsman,_Kings_Cross

    The Flying Scotsman, 2008 The Scottish Stores, the original name. The Flying Scotsman is a Grade II listed public house at 2–4 Caledonian Road, Kings Cross, London. [1]It was originally called The Scottish Stores, and was designed by the architects Wylson and Long, probably for James Kirk, and built in 1900–01.

  8. Blue Highways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Highways

    He had coined the term to refer to small, forgotten, out-of-the-way roads connecting rural America, which were drawn in blue on the Rand McNally road atlases of the time. He outfitted his van with a bunk, a camping stove, a portable toilet and a copy of Walt Whitman 's Leaves of Grass and John Neihardt 's Black Elk Speaks .

  9. Caledonian Road - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caledonian_Road

    Caledonian Road could refer to: Caledonian Road, London, a road in North London; Caledonian Road tube station, a tube station in North London; Caledonian Road and Barnsbury station, a nearby railway station in North London; Holloway and Caledonian Road railway station a former station on the main line out of King's Cross.