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The London Magazine
The London Magazine

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The London Magazine, 01 abr. 2026

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Descripción

Lee The London Magazine en línea con PressReader. The London Magazine, publicado en Inglés, es un revista de Reino Unido. Mantente al día con el número actual o navega por los números anteriores de The London Magazine en el archivo.

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En esta edición

ArticleTrompe l'oeil / The Dirac Equa­tion

She still doesn't know how to meas­ure The gap that yawns Between word and deed She doesn't want to meas­ure it, so many other things Offer bet­ter pro­tec­tion Without the com­fort of con­nec­tion —yes, it's strange, she knows— The crevice both...

Trompe l'oeil / The Dirac Equa­tion

ArticleIma­ging the Invis­ible

On a morn­ing that we have good reason to believe was in the autumn – Octo­ber of the year 1837 to be pre­cise – Louis-Jaques-Mandé Daguerre went up onto the roof of the stu­dio he occu­pied at num­ber 5 Rue des Marais in the French cap­ital. In the...

Ima­ging the Invis­ible

Article30 Septem­ber, 2017

In a Kens­ing­ton book­shop where I'd spent months try­ing to make Catalan look less lonely, I saw the foot­baller – let's call him Marc Borràs – take Foix off the shelf and for­get, for a few seconds, where he was. I'd spent months in that shop,...

30 Septem­ber, 2017

ArticleThe Hearth, Cal­vary, Eros

1. Think­ing is like hands: it has ges­tures. Some are friendly, like a hand­shake, oth­ers mark out a ter­rit­ory and assert them­selves. Some are ges­tures of refusal, ward­ing off a threat, or simply born of anxi­ety about the world. Some are...

The Hearth, Cal­vary, Eros

ArticleThe Insur­gent Mis­for­tune

Stunned by the mob of mis­for­tunes that had piled up on that old woman's life, this par­tic­u­lar mis­for­tune stopped, took in the scene and said: hold on a second. At first she spoke under her breath, as though to her­self. Then she raised her...

The Insur­gent Mis­for­tune

ArticleLove

Fuck­ing had become a com­pet­i­tion. They'd decided on that, thought Nico, even though he'd held out as long as he pos­sibly could. Gael had told him about that book by Mir­anda July, which he'd read search­ing for him­self the whole time, and about...

Love

ArticleLit Crit

Col­lell spent the after­noon ana­lys­ing the par­al­lel­isms and dis­sim­il­ar­it­ies across the twenty-third chapter of a novel (which is curi­ously replete with char­ac­ters whose names almost all begin with the same let­ter), a pre­vi­ous short...

Lit Crit

ArticleRain

She had just fin­ished going over the room one last time. She walked to the door and looked back to gauge the effect. The night before, she had washed the drapes that hung at the great win­dow, and that morn­ing she had ironed them. They looked lovely,...

Rain