Novel Review: Great Expectations

If you’ve never read a Dicken’s novel then Great Expectations is an excellent introduction to his world.  The novel is written with great wit highlighting Dicken’s hallmark skill of describing people and events with a wonderfully humorous turn of phrase.  As with all Dicken’s novels there is a cornucopia of characters exhibiting a wide range […]

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Novel Review: Animal Farm

In a nutshell Animal Farm is pure genius in its simplicity.  As a former student of Russian, I have numerous books on Russian history books sitting on my numerous bookshelves collecting dust.  But for a concise and pretty accurate account of what happened to Lenin’s revolution, then Animal Farm is a perfect choice.  Orwell dissects […]

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Novel Review: To Kill a Mockingbird

To Kill a Mockingbird is a classic of modern American literature.  Simply told, it depicts small town life in racially-charged Alabama during the Great Depression and manages to capture the innocence of childhood whilst dealing with issues of racial prejudice and injustice.  The hero of the book, Atticus Finch, is an unassuming man, a widower […]

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Film Review: The Third Man

This is one of my favourite films.  In it Orson Welles shows what real star quality is by dint of the fact that he’s hardly in the movie yet still manages to dominate it.  The film is set in Vienna, a city for which, admittedly, I have a particular soft spot for. But that aside, like […]

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Film Review: Mr Smith Goes To Washington

If you’re ever feeling like you’re up against it and in need of some welcome reassurance that it will all work out in the end, then you can do no better than watch either one of Frank Capra’s most famous films, It’s a Wonderful Life or Mr Smith Goes to Washington.  (Failing that an enormous […]

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Film Review: It Happened One Night

It Happened One Night was made in 1934 and directed by one of my favourite directors, Frank Capra.  It stars Clark Gable as a washed up newspaper reporter, Peter Warne and Claudette Colbert as a spoilt and pampered heiress. Neither of the leads were enthralled about making  the film, particularly Colbert who insisted before agreeing […]

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Film Review: Green Zone

Green Zone is set in Iraq around the time of Bush’s now infamous speech aboard USS Abraham Lincoln where he infamously stated – “In the Battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed.”  As my knowledge of Iraqi politics is probably only equalled in its paucity by my knowledge of quantum physics […]

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Foreign Novel Review: Das Siebte Kreuz – The Seventh Cross

I originally bought The Seventh Cross by Anna Seghers simply because it was on sale in a bookshop in Vienna. Admittedly, this is usually not a good reason to buy a novel but it turned out I had bought myself a real bargain.  The Seventh Cross is one of the best books I have ever […]

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Foreign Novel Review: Schachnovelle – The Royal Game

One of my favourite authors, this is Zweig’s last work and probably his most well-known – at least in German speaking Europe.  Written just before he and his wife committed suicide while in exile from the Nazis in Brazil, Schachnovelle tells the story of a chess game on board a liner from New York to […]

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Foreign Novel Review: Jeder Stirbt für sich Allein – Alone in Berlin

Alone in Berlin is to quote the German newspaper Der Tagesspiegel, “the literary rediscovery of the century”.  Originally written in the autumn of 1946 and in under 4 weeks by the writer Hans Fallada, the novel gives a chilling insight into life under the Nazi regime whilst providing a testament to the endurance of the […]

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