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The Times Great Letters: A century of notable correspondence

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author-23119 author-james-owen company-hcuk customername-UK imprint-Times Books isbned-9780008280222 l1-Books l2-Biography and True Stories l2-Economics l2-Humanities l2-Language l2-Literature and literary studies l2-Literature Culture & Art l2-Non Fiction l2-Society and Social Science letters letter to editor;correspondence correspondent;book books of letters;yours faithfully;modern britain;published unpublished letters;Iain Hollingshead;diary diaries;cultural history;post-war Britain;letters page pages;journalism journa productcode-CBW productcode-DND productcode-DNL productcode-DNP productcode-JBCC1 productcode-JBCT4 productcode-KNTP1 productcode-KNTP2 productcode-NHTB source-feed subtype-normal version-4.0 wk-the-times-great-letters-a-century-of-notable-correspondence


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Books by James Owen
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  • Description

The Times has the most famous letters page of any newspaper. This delightful selection of over 300 items of correspondence over the last century shows precisely why.

As a forum for debate, playground for opinion-formers, advertising space for decision-makers and noticeboard for eccentrics, nothing rivals it for entertainment value. By turns well-informed, well-intentioned, curious, quirky and bizarre, since 1914 it has taken the temperature of the British way of life and provided a window on the national character.

Among those who have written to The Times to have their say are some of the major political and literary figures of the modern era, including Margaret Thatcher, Benito Mussolini, Graham Greene and John Le Carré. There are contributions, too, from Agatha Christie, Alastair Campbell, AA Milne, Yehudi Menuhin, Theresa May and Morrissey.

If you want to know why kippers are dyed, who first turned up their trousers, how to make perfect porridge or just how to have a letter printed in The Times, this infinitely witty, diverting and memorable anthology should be, sincerely, yours.