Category Archives: New Books

My Book of the Month is Giles Tremlett’s Catherine of Aragon

Catherine of Aragon is not a name that slips easily off the lips of most English schoolboys, unless they’ve been educated as Catholics, still a minority breed. Few early students of English history have failed to memorise where she was in the Tudor pecking order: ‘divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, and survived. ’ Oh yes, Catherine was the one who was divorced first. Of Henry V111’s eight wives, it is Catherine who has endured in the collective memory of the English people, arguably for the wrong reasons. Catherine was mythified …

Read on >


On Greene’s trail

My book of the month is Tim Butcher’s Chasing the Devil published by Chatto & Windus. Subtitled, The Search for Africa’s Spirit, this is about a continent I rarely touched as a  foreign correspondent, still less as an author. However Graham Greene, who inspired Butcher’s journey across Sierra Leone and Liberia, has formed part of my life since, as  a young boy, I was introduced to him for the first time by my father at the Garrick Club. My father was one of Greene’s early editors, and a life-long friend. In WW2 …

Read on >


Newman: The Necessary Saint

My online Book Review of the Month is dedicated to Newman’s Unquiet Grave by John Cornwell (Published by Continuum) I have two reasons for picking John Cornwell’s biography of Newman as my latest book of the month. First on the personal front, my own recently published attempt at biography, Papa Spy , reminded me of how much its subject, my father, the late Tom Burns, owed to Newman, as a leading Catholic publisher (and wartime spook at odds with those Marxists who had infiltrated British intelligence.) From his early schooldays …

Read on >


A Dark Book in August

This month’s online Book Review: Berlin at War by Roger Moorhouse (Bodley Head) 432 pages August in the northern hemisphere  always  has always struck me as having something of a tail-end feel about it, not least in the publishing industry. Long-past are the pre-Christmas heavy-hitters with ‘star’ authors or their ‘star’ topics hogging the front-desks. Gone too is the excitement of the new titles out in spring and early summer. Many readers have taken the few good hits, in paperback, off to the beach for the last glimpse of sun …

Read on >