DAVID YEARSLEY is fascinated by the account of four composers who transformed their experiences of the second world war and the Holocaust into deeply moving works of art
Black England: A Forgotten Georgian History
by Gretchen Gerzina
John Murray, £20
BLACK England is the result of a brief exchange in a London bookshop between the US writer and academic Gretchen Gerzina and a shop assistant who told her there were no black people in Britain before the Windrush generation.
Knowing this was not the case, Gerzina set out to write an accessible account of the long-standing history of black settlement in England, set in the wider context of the struggle against slavery.
Her aim in writing the book is to tell a history through the eyes of those who lived it, from well-known figures such as Dido Belle, Ignatius Sancho and Olauda Equiano to more obscure people with a fragmentary historical record.
ELLIS RAE recommends a stunning history of the active role played by the British monarchy in establishing and profiting from slavery
On the 121st anniversary of communist Claudia Jones’s birth ROGER McKENZIE looks at political events that shaped her, and those she helped shape
GUILLERMO THOMAS is persuaded by a scathing critique of the Church of England and its embeddedness in imperialism
SUE TURNER is appalled by the story of the only original colonising family to still own a plantation in the West Indies


