No doubt some better reviewer will one day contribute to Amazon's reviews of Beneath A Waning Moon, but in the present instance it is a pleasure to recommend this installment of the greatest writier of the twentieth century's body of diaries. In this volume, JL-M seems to come out of the funk which seemed to afflict him through much of Deep Romantic Chasm and Holy Dread. Michael Bloch appears to have hit his stride as editor of these later diaries, as well. Unlike Fanny Partridge, whose own well-known contribution to the genre is much appreciated, JL-M is mercifully (mostly!) unshockable, and free of self-conscious aspirations to literary grandeur. Yet, his entries, which are by turns elagiac, comic, somber, tender, cold, brutally insightful, and surprisingly affectionate are not only stunningly written, but also provide the reader with a mirror into which one can look and see one's own face. The best diarists, and of these there are very few (Alan Clark being another), not only allow the reader to enter another world, but through their own self-revelation make it possible for one to see more acutely and deeply into one's own life, as well. To read James Lees-Milne's complete diaries (by which I mean to include Another Self) is to be taken on a tour of the unexpected transitions of turbulent twentieth century England, and simultaneously to be given the rare privilege of growing up -and old- with an unforgettably instructive and amusing friend. JL-M has taught me much since his first volume of diaries, Ancestral Voices, and I look forward to the publication of the final two volumes, though with some sadness, since the series will then end. A critical note- how I wish that Michael Bloch could find a way to publish the "Unexpurgated Diaries of JL-M". The footnotes to this present volume are good, but a little chaste in description, since in the notes "friend" and "close friend" often really mean "lover" or "mistress", and sometimes it seems that MB had, for various reasons, to leave out really funny and interesting bits of background material. No doubt MB finds it necessary to remain welcome at certain dinner tables, though JL-M never seemed to worry much about that sort of thing. Since I've had the privilege of knowing some of the denizens of the JL-M diaries, I have made it a kind of diaristic field sport to add juicy tidbits as extra footnotes. Everyone ought to do the same with their own copies.