One of the glories of the 18th century Scottish Enlightenment, The Edinburgh Review was revived in the early 80's and captured the diverse intellectual and literary energy bubbling up in Scotland under Thatcher-era Scotland (Stuart Cosgrove, now a chief executive at Channel Four, once said to me that "for a time living in London, I couldn't live without it"). The current run is taking an explicitly internationalist viewpoint, mixed in with Scottish writers like Ewan Morrison and James Kelman. There is an archive of online articles, but it's frustrating that very little of its riches are available online. This is a bete noire of Thoughtland - a faulty choice of wood-pulp-and-ink obscurity over digital ubiquity and influence - to be explored anon.