An agreeable hotchpotch, Alan Sillitoe’s Leading the Blind (Macmillan, £15.99, ISBN 0 333 64225 2) is based on guidebooks published before 1914. It’s like watching a quick-fire show of lantern slides: here are the “sublime horrors” of Swiss mountains, dirty frescoes in Pompeii, bandits in Greece and the explorer Richard Burton riding on a crocodile. Delightful, but dip, don’t trudge.
More from New ÒÁÈ˾þÃ
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending New ÒÁÈ˾þà articles
1
The Selfish Gene at 50: Why Dawkins’s evolution classic still holds up
2
Photos reveal unexpected details from the world's first atomic test
3
Mathematicians stunned by AI's biggest breakthrough in mathematics yet
4
How I used psychology to come back from the worst year of my life
5
The distant world that is our best hope of finding alien life
6
Putting CO2 into rocks and getting hydrogen out is climate double win
7
The ‘doomsday’ glacier’s giant ice shelf is about to break away
8
Intoxicating and astonishing: Why 'The Selfish Gene' almost never was
9
We may finally know why dinosaurs like T. rex evolved tiny arms
10
Epic dreaming is leaving people exhausted and distressed



