The Current Issue

Issue 548 Norma Clarke on Charlie Chaplin’s London * Richard Bourke on revolution * Lucasta Miller on George Sand * Peter Davidson on Constable * Philippe Marlière on far-right France * Munro Price on the Marquis de Morès * Piers Brendon on Trotsky’s demise * Mark Glancy on Hitchcock’s scores * Felicity Brown on romantic fiction * Simon Nixon on money laundering * Will Wiles on pinball * Joe Moran on the Footlights * Andrew Preston on Robert McNamara * Fitzroy Morrissey on the last Ottoman caliph * Hermione Eyre on Jessica Mitford * Michael Burleigh on MAGA * Freya Johnston on Daniel Defoe * Alexander Lee on Henry Wotton * Kapil Komireddi on Buddhist extremism * Miranda Seymour on Russian forests *  Zoe Guttenplan on George Saunders * Ben Hutchinson on Gabriele Tergit * Peter Kemp on Julian Barnes * Joseph Williams on Madeline Cash *  and much, much more…

Norma Clarke

Hard Streets: Working-Class Lives in Charlie Chaplin’s London

By Jacqueline Riding

Charlie Chaplin (1889–1977) gets top billing in the subtitle of Hard Streets but he’s not the star of the show. The book begins with and is built around an earlier rags-to-riches tale and its wider purpose is to make us look closer at the rags and be less beguiled by the riches.  George Tinworth (1843–1913) – of whom, the author admits, few people will have heard – was born and grew up in the same Walworth neighbourhood where Chaplin’s mother, Hannah, was born in 1865 and where Charlie himself entered the world. Desperate ... read more

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