Europe
Asia
Oceania
Americas
Africa
CELEBRATING BRITAIN
Kind or cruel, inspiring or inept, the fictional
I don’t live at home with my three younger siblings anymore. I have my own flat which is shoe-box-sized, but mine, and I can read there whenever I like. I’ve always been a reader, ever since my mum sh
As a child, Camilla was captivated by Anna Sewell's Black Beauty. She says, "I have to admit, I ended up probably being a pony-mad child with Black Beauty. which I howled over, night after night after
BRENDA BLETHYN and JESSICA REYNOLDS on TV’s latest reimagining of a bestselling revenge romp
THE MARK OF A GREAT, TOUGH BOOK MAY NOT be how many literature classes it’s taught in but how many film or TV adaptations you can drape on its branches without breaking them. Dramatizations are tricky
THROUGHOUT history, women have paved the way to a brighter future in politics, science, society, the arts, literacy and countless other fields. We’ve had Rosalind Franklin, the chemist responsible for
EARLIER this month, English director Emerald Fennell’s interpretation of Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights” hit cinemas. Fennell’s take on the literary classic divided audiences even before its releas