tue 03/12/2024

Books features

Apollo's Angels: A History of Ballet

'Apollo's Angels' by Jennifer Homans: 'A book that every dance lover should read'

It is rare that you read a book, and mentally shout “Yes! Yes!” as you tick off all the things you agree with, but had never actually verbalised. It is even rarer to read a book where, in a subject you know pretty well, on almost every page you...

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theartsdesk in Yasnaya Polyana: The Lost Centenary of Tolstoy's Death

Russia marks the centenary of the death of Leo Tolstoy on 20 November – but the level of local tribute to one of the country’s greatest writers seems markedly muted for a figure two of whose novels, Anna Karenina and War and Peace, are regularly...

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Film Gallery: Bill Gold's PosterWorks

'Dracula Has Risen from the Grave': 'The poster is not only funny and sexy - it's of a piece with the film's camp Gothic'

Although there are thematic links between many of the movie posters designed by Bill Gold between 1942 and 2003, especially in the talismanic use of telephones (Dial M for Murder, Klute, The Front Page) and guns (Casablanca, Deliverance, the Dirty...

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The Penguin Jazz Guide: The 1001 Best Albums

It's a curious fact that, for whole swathes of the music-buying public, their jazz collection has never grown beyond the ubiquitous Kind of Blue. OK, it's a seminal masterpiece which continues to sell like shovels in a snow storm. But why stop there...

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theartsdesk Q&A: Photographer Mick Rock

Mick Rock (b 1948) captured some of rock's most provocative and memorable images: David Bowie at the height of his Ziggy Stardust androgyny; Debbie Harry looking every inch the Marilyn Monroe of punk; Lou Reed sweating beneath his Kabuki make-up -...

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South Asian Literature 1: Romesh Gunesekera Q&A

Romesh Gunesekera, the Sri Lankan-born British novelist: 'Usually we don’t have to identify ourselves in 15 words'

The inaugural South Asian Literature Festival takes place in London over 10 days. It has drawn authors such as Amit Chaudhuri, Fatima Bhutto, Kenan Malik and Mohamed Hanif, as well as publishers, translators and artists (performance and graphic)...

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South Asian Literature 2: Rana Dasgupta micro-story

A tanbur: Featured in Rana Dasgupta's micro-story

Rana Dasgupta is a British novelist living in Delhi. His first novel, Tokyo Cancelled (2005), a 13-part story cycle in the tradition of Chaucer and Boccaccio, was translated into eight languages and shortlisted for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize....

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theartsdesk Q&A: Actor Simon Callow

Simon Callow is on the phone when I arrive at his five-star digs, booming his apparently considerable misgivings vis-a-vis appearing in some reality TV exercise in which he will be asked to tutor disadvantaged kids in the mysterious arts of...

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The Born Free Legacy, BBC Four

If you have fond childhood memories of either the Born Free book or movie, you might want to stay away. From the opening moments of this documentary, the knowledge that lion-loving conservationist George Adamson was fatally shot in the back on a...

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What I'm Reading: Broadcaster Mavis Nicholson

The Oldie's agony aunt makes her literary selection

They say women past a certain age can’t get work in broadcasting. In more enlightened times, Mavis Nicholson was the first woman to interview on daytime television. She had given up a career in advertising, married, and had children by the time she...

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Extract: Sam Bleakley's Surfing Brilliant Corners

Surfer dude rides the waves

Sam Bleakley’s first book, Surfing Brilliant Corners, charts a decade of "extreme surf travel" with renowned photographer John Callahan. He is a jazz fanatic and surfer from Sennen, West Cornwall and a multiple European and British Longboard surfing...

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Book Review: Bob Dylan in America

Capturing a "shape-shifter" – as the Irish musician Liam Clancy described Bob Dylan – is not a simple task. The object of the hunt is by definition elusive. Sean Wilentz’s multi-dimensional series of essays on Bob Dylan chases its prey with a...

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