Rob Langham
Goodreads Author
Born
in Taplow, The United Kingdom
Website
Twitter
Member Since
January 2009
URL
https://www.goodreads.com/roblangham
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The Blizzard - The Football Quarterly: Issue 4
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2012
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2 editions
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From the Jaws of Victory
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Falling for Football
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published
2014
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2 editions
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Reading 'til I die
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2007
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The Pontop & South Shields Railway
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Tanfield Waggonway
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Rob’s Recent Updates
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Rob
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| I richly enjoyed this book inasmuch because of its setting in post-independence Pakistan and it’s a novel to place alongside Salman Rushdie’s Shame as an essential portrait of a country, the literature of which is much less familiar than that of its ...more | |
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Rob
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| I was quite amazed that I had not come across this before as my mother travelled to the UK by boat from New Zealand at the same time as the action is set in the early 1960s – an epic trip. The fictional town of Waimaru from which one of the character ...more | |
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Rob
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| Having struggled with The Grapes of Wrath when I read it a few decades ago now, the prospect of tackling this later representation of the Steinbeck oeuvre wasn’t hugely enticing but circumstances have made getting to a bookshop or library tricky so I ...more | |
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Rob
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| I picked this up in the extensive bande dessinée section of a ginormous bookshop in Lille and it’s firm proof of how much more seriously the French take the genre than we anglos. It’s always been a pet peeve of mine that the graphic novel as a form i ...more | |
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| The third part of Mahfouz’s trilogy of modern Egypt was the most satisfying for me. A bit leaner as just over 300 pages, it’s none the less impactful for that. The tenets of modernisation are now more visible and politics is much more to the fore. In ...more | |
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| This is certainly superior rock autobiography – the Screaming Trees passed me by at the time and while the way the UK music press quickly moved on from grunge (a moniker Lanegan cannot countenance) with the advent of Britpop, there’s also the suspici ...more | |
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| Routledge’s Seminar Studies book series is long-running and well-known. Many of the books started under the Longman imprint and have come to be seen as classics, written as they were by very well-known academic historians (although also occasionally ...more | |
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Rob
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| I’m not whether the unusual formal nature of Maria Reva’s excellent novel came out by design or by accident as, a third of the way through, the acknowledgements suddenly appear while the main narrative is interspersed with some of the author’s own mu ...more | |
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| Here’ s a prediction: I can really see David Szalay’s Booker Prize scooping Flesh adapted into a Oscar contending film in the coming years – in particular, the main protagonist put me in mind of the Belgian actor Matthias Schoenaerts and especially h ...more | |
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| I was fascinated by the premise of this where an alternate history is imagined that sees the Black Death finish the job to wipe out the whole of the European population in the fourteenth century, leaving China and a multicontinental Islamic state to ...more | |
“….So much crueller than any British colony, they say, so much more brutal towards the local Africans, so much more manipulative after begrudgingly granting independence. But the history of British colonialism in Africa, from Sierra Leone to Zimbabwe, Kenya to Botswana and else-where, is not fundamentally different from what Belgium did in the Congo. You can argue about degree, but both systems were predicated on the same assumption: that white outsiders knew best and Africans were to be treated not as partners, but as underlings. What the British did in Kenya to suppress the pro-independence mau-mau uprising in the 1950s, using murder, torture and mass imprisonment, was no more excusable than the mass arrests and political assassinations committed by Belgium when it was trying to cling on to the Congo. And the outside world's tolerance of a dictator in the Congo like Mobutu, whose corruption and venality were overlooked for strategic expedience, was no different from what happened in Zimbabwe, where the dictator Robert Mugabe was allowed to run his country and its people into the ground because Western powers gullibly accepted the way he presented himself as the only leader able to guarantee stability and an end to civil strife. Those sniffy British colonial types might not like to admit it, but the Congo represents the quintessence of the entire continent’s colonial experience. It might be extreme and it might be shocking, but what happened in the Congo is nothing but colonialism in its purest, basest form.”
― Blood River: A Journey to Africa’s Broken Heart
― Blood River: A Journey to Africa’s Broken Heart
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Jarvo
Feb 16, 2015 05:16AM
Interesting stuff. The British Empire seems to be cropping up in just about everything I read at the moment, but I'd argue that the point Butcher is making is academic rather than ethical. Even if the Belgians in the Congo had been worse than the British in Kenya, say, it doesn't make what the British did right. It is a bit like the old argument about who was worse, Hitler or Stalin? The 'loser' in that particular argument doesn't suddenly become your ideal dinner guest. I think you should read The Rise & Fall of the British Empire book, amongst other things it argues that the British were at their worst when they ended up defending the interests of a large, entrenched group of settlers. Which is a key difference to the Belgians in the Congo.
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