
Translating the Poetry of Kabbalah: Author interview with Peter Cole
Peter Cole’s brand new work of translation, The Poetry of Kabbalah, is the first every English-language collection of poems from the…
Peter Cole’s brand new work of translation, The Poetry of Kabbalah, is the first every English-language collection of poems from the…
Published soon, The Woman Reader by Belinda Jack is the first book to address the controversies associated with…
In his new book The Event of Literature Terry Eagleton returns to the discipline to which he has devoted…
It’s only a few months until the London 2012 Olympic Games kicks off this summer, but where did…
A Visitor’s Guide to the Ancient Olympics transports the reader to the games of 388 B.C., providing a lively…
In the second part in our series of interviews with Marxist critic, literary theorist and philosopher Terry Eagleton, we…
Earlier this month we took a look at January’s Book of the Month, The Very Hungry City by Austin Troy, which…
Nigel Warburton’s engaging book A Little History of Philosophy (published this month) introduces the great thinkers in Western…
An interview with New Yorker journalist and author Janet Malcolm is a rare thing. Nevertheless, as a seasoned journalist, she…
In 2011, in collaboration with the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York, Yale University Press published Alexander McQueen:…
G. A. BRADSHAW discusses her new book Elephants on the Edge: What Animals Teach us About Humanity with…
“My series unlocks the front door of the Englishman’s castle to peer into the privacies and intimacies of…
What does Fires of Faith tell us about the consequences of religious brutality? Later generations built the reign…