About The Coventry Review
The Coventry Review is an independent magazine of clear, careful writing for a general audience. We cover health and wellbeing, technology, travel, lifestyle and home, science and nature, and money and work — the everyday subjects that reward a little understanding.
Our mission
The internet does not lack for content; it lacks for calm. Too much writing shouts, oversimplifies, or exists only to sell. Our aim is the opposite: level-headed, evidence-minded articles that respect your time and your intelligence, written by people who care about getting things right. We would rather explain one idea well than list twenty half-truths.
How we work
Every article is written by a named member of our masthead and edited before it is published. We draw on reputable, publicly available sources, we favour established evidence over passing trends, and we tell you plainly when something is uncertain or a matter of judgement. You can read more in our Editorial Policy.
How we stay free
The Coventry Review is supported by advertising, including native recommendation widgets served by third parties. Advertising never influences our editorial choices, and sponsored recommendations are labelled as such. See our Privacy & Cookies page for how advertising works on this site.
The masthead
Daniel Okafor covers technology, money and work. A former systems engineer, he specialises in turning complicated systems — from passkeys to compounding — into plain language anyone can act on.
Elena Marsh writes about health and everyday wellbeing, with a focus on the evidence behind common advice. She favours calm, practical guidance over trends, and is happiest debunking a miracle cure.
Marcus Feld is a science writer with a background in earth science. He explains the physics and geology hiding in plain sight — the colour of the sky, the shape of a valley — for readers who never thought of themselves as science people.
Priya Raman is a travel and culture writer who has reported from more than forty countries. She writes in praise of slower, more considered travel and the small courtesies that make it richer.
Sofia Bianchi writes on home, cooking and the practical craft of daily life. She believes most of domestic competence comes down to a handful of repeatable habits, and she is on a quiet mission against the marathon weekend clean.
Get in touch
Questions, corrections or ideas? We read every message — see our Contact page or email editors@hakkindabilgial.com.