London Review of Books 4+

LRB Limited

Designed for iPad

    • Free
    • Offers In-App Purchases

Screenshots

Description

Performance enhancements

The London Review of Books is Europe’s leading magazine of books and ideas.

Published twice a month, the LRB is home to the most exciting writing on literature, history, politics, philosophy, art, poetry and more.

Already a subscriber? Simply install the app and sign in with your LRB website login details.

App features
- Read the LRB anywhere, even offline
- Get the latest issue on Wednesday, before it hits the newsstand
- Save articles for later reference
- Resize text for easy reading
- Dark mode option
- Access ten years of the LRB dating back to 2014

Subscribing via the app
- The app is free to download and comes with a free preview issue
- Subscribers to the LRB magazine can access the app with their LRB website login and do not require a separate app subscription
- Subscriptions made via the app, however, do not include access to the LRB website and online archive
- In the app, you can purchase individual issues of the magazine or an annual subscription
- Subscriptions are charged to your Apple account and managed in App Store account settings
- All subscriptions automatically renew unless auto-renew is turned off at least 24 hours before the end of the subscription period
- If your subscription lapses, you will still be able to read the issues published while you were an active subscriber

What’s New

Version 4.1

App improvements and performance enhancements

Ratings and Reviews

4.9 out of 5
2.8K Ratings

2.8K Ratings

Ka Ramses ,

Does not support active reading like the web site does

Why would the LRB deliver an otherwise solid mobile app, that doesn’t support annotations! Hopefully that is only temporary, because I enjoy reading much more when I can markup my copy with highlights and margin notes. Luckily, I can do so by generating a PDF of an article off the LRB’s web site, usually via the Safari web browser’s Markup command. Many PDF readers allow me to handwrite margin notes on a tablet, and highlight passages, names and expressions that spark my interest. I derive so much more pleasure and benefit from an article when I engage it actively like this. While it’s great that the LRB’s web version offers the capability, please support me in a future version of the app. Generating a good PDF of the article inside the app would be perfect, as I can then archive my annotations in my favorite note-taking app.

don makeem ,

I dont “like” to read on my phone

Or on a computer, really. I do plenty of it but w/o the patience i’ve learned w/ print. W/ patience comes focus, which goes on its merry way not tithering.

A great app for reading when you’ve left your hard copy behind, which arrives promptly, probably before you knew it. The week or two behind i’m usually at w/ print (often longer or alrogether lost depending on fluctuations in my schedule) does not exist here. I’m as current as a reader in the UK.

I haven’t tried printing from here, but maybe that’s something i would do w longer stories ive since recycled or that are from the archive. There is a “download” option for each issue. On my iphone, I’m sure I could.

You are not going to get anything more here than what you came for. A rare thing indeed in this hypertechno, online world we’re in. A blessed thing indeed.

Thanks,

C_phl ,

Great app but text sizing is a blunt instrument

This app functions really well and is very easy to use, and it is a wonderful addition particularly during the pandemic when paper copies arrive late or sometimes not at all. But the choice of font size needs some work. There are only three or four settings and the difference — on an iPad mini — between the smallest size and the next largest is comically large. The smallest size means about 39 lines of an average 10 words each on the screen. He next size up is 25 lines of an average of about 6-7 words per line. There really should be something in between.

App Privacy

The developer, LRB Limited, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.

Data Not Linked to You

The following data may be collected but it is not linked to your identity:

  • Identifiers
  • Usage Data
  • Diagnostics

Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More

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