The Critic Magazine

Crooked compendium

The complete language of crime runs to thousands of words. Ms Lees offers an alluring mixture, the good bits, as it were
Jonathon Green is a lexicographer and author

they say, and Ms Lees, properly Gibson-Lees, seems well-suited to her self-imposed task. Her father was probably a spy (the crime), and in Hong Kong, where Ms Lees spent her youth, her mother was a headmistress (the dictionary). She has been an actress, notably in TV’s where she played a communist résistante, a role that for whatever reason required her to appear

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Critic Magazine

The Critic Magazine5 min read
A Discordant Song
BARELY A WEEK GOES BY WITHOUT further bad news in the world of classical music. Swingeing cuts to orchestras, choirs, ensembles and concert series leave many struggling for survival. Broadcast music is reconfigured to be more “accessible” and “inclus
The Critic Magazine4 min read
Woman About Town
TO THE BOOKSHOP LIBRERIA IN SHOREDITCH, to celebrate the launch of Tracy King’s memoir Learning to Think. It’s a record of an extraordinary life — it opens with a scene of young Tracy being exorcised, after her perfectly reasonable trauma and grief f
The Critic Magazine3 min read
Out With The Old And In With The New
LAST MONTH I WROTE ABOUT how the marketeers at the auction houses have pushed luxury brands as the “gateway drug” for new buyers coming into the art market. However, it remains to be seen in what direction these new Hermès handbag-toting buyers will

Related Books & Audiobooks