- Current Books
- The Blaze of Obscurity
- North Face of Soho
- The Revolt of the Pendulum
- Reviews
- Extracts
- Bea Miles, Vagrant
- Crime Movie Music
- On Modern Australian Painting
- On American Movie Critics
- On A.D. Hope
- Perfectly Bad Sentence
- Insult to the Language
- On Camille Paglia
- On John Bayley
- On John Anderson
- On Elias Canetti
- Starting with Sludge
- On Jonathan James-Moore
- On Ian Adam
- On Diamond Jim McClelland
- On Nicole Kidman
- Show Me the Horror
- On Niki Lauda
- On Damon Hill
- On Pat Kavanagh
- Artists in Exile
- On Leni Riefenstahl
- On British Films
- The Writer's Revenge
- Exit Roth's Ghost
- On Crime Fiction
- Saying Famous Things
- The Question of Karl Kraus
- Kingsley Amis Biography
- The Robert Hughes Memoirs
- Happiness Writes White
- The Meaning of Recognition
- As Of This Writing
- Cultural Amnesia
- Books Out of Print




A brazen shout from long trumpets held high at the angle of a Hitler salute. Cut to medium close-up of young Aryan faces with puffed cheeks. Dolly back as two new biographies of Leni Riefenstahl appear virtually at once. Jürgen Trimborn's book, well translated out of the original German by Edna McCowan, has the better pictures. Steven Bach's book, backed up by his deep personal experience as a high-echelon film executive handling dingbat directors, has the better text. Though neither book is precisely adulatory, put them together and they add up to an awful lot of attention. She might be dead, but she won't lie down.