
Why dictators find the lure of writing books irresistible
Daniel Kalder investigates why dictators have aspired to be, as Stalin put it, “engineers of souls”, and – in pursuit of…
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Daniel Kalder investigates why dictators have aspired to be, as Stalin put it, “engineers of souls”, and – in pursuit of…
ByThe musician talks the rock’n’roll music programmes of the 1970s, the advent of idiot Trump and the hate agenda of Brexit.
ByIn a 2011 study, only 25 per cent of patients who tested positive for influenza actually had any symptoms.
ByShe’s always late, I forget she takes sugar. And in those humdrum rituals, true friendship is made.
ByAll you need to know about cats is that they will tear your heart out, metaphorically if not literally,…
ByMost such tipples are noticeably lacking in fans beyond their native national borders.
ByChilli Island Radio plays songs like The Doors’ “LA Woman”, with its shaggy-headed bass line, written around the time…
ByThe film, which tells the tale of two adventurers separated by half a century, falls to pieces in its second…
ByIn the era of Trumpian unilateralism and Russian aggression, EU withdrawal is more reckless than ever.
ByBBC Two remembers Dave Allen in a disappointingly flat biopic, while ITV3 pays homage to the enduringly funny Larry Grayson.
ByIn On Grand Strategy, historian John Lewis Gaddis offers a timely historical overview of the constituents of leadership from the…
ByThe womb is a battlefield. Never underestimate the amount of sadism pregnant women can evoke, warns Rose.
ByPhilip Hensher’s 12th work of fiction is a synthesis of material, traditions and styles.
By“What countryside?” a friend of Cocker’s pointedly asks.
ByThe problem with Rebel Prince is that the author’s hatred of Prince Charles renders every titbit credibility lite.
ByCatholic and rational, profound and comic, Scottish and international: the novelist squared circle after circle.
By“Do you think she’ll ever think about what she did for me?” I asked. “I think she’ll go home…
ByA broadcaster, politician, author and poet, Magee once occupied many prominent roles. Now, in old age, he lives in one…
ByThe world invested in Britain as a gateway to Europe. This, rather than the Anglosphere fantasies of the Brexiteers,…
ByThere is a disparity between the bear’s idealised portrayal, and the messy reality of its warming world.
By“The British public won't suck up 15 years, if not longer, of wage stagnation without some kind of political…
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from Westminster.
ByHalf a million struggling young Greeks have now migrated, with thousands more leaving every week.
ByUsers of the Facetune app can slim their jaws, enlarge their eyes and plump their lips at the touch of…
ByIs it any wonder that approval ratings for the President and the United States are in freefall across the…
ByThe United States is now a democracy in which there are no shared facts and are only disputed opinions.
ByHow the trial of four rugby players exposed a deep seam of misogyny.
ByThe former Slits band member finds joy in what Camden council once failed to appreciate: the Alexandra and Ainsworth Estate.
ByHow is this Labour leader different from all other Labour leaders?
ByFormer health secretary Lansley overlooked his £1.5bn “costly diversion” as he criticised later cuts to the NHS.
ByThe party leadership’s handling of the scourge of anti-Semitism has consistently fallen short.
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