
Italy in the wake of coronavirus
Our writer travels from Berlin to Naples by train and discovers that the pandemic has brought out the best…
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Our writer travels from Berlin to Naples by train and discovers that the pandemic has brought out the best…
ByThese are not eye-catching creatures. Field guides often describe them as “undistinguished”. But, in this unfamiliar and far from…
BySix days after I was supposed to die, I went home – and though I had only been gone…
ByActs of courage in the age of Covid-19.
ByMany of the author’s family perished in the Holocaust and his parents viewed Germany with great suspicion. But today…
ByAs a child our writer dreamed of being a professional footballer, but she always wanted to play not with…
ByThe First Minister, who turned 50 this month, has had a good crisis and the SNP is surging in…
ByHow our writer was prompted to reflect on the ideology’s beginnings, after the experience of life in lockdown exposed the legacy of…
ByHow Alfonso Cuarón’s 2006 dystopian masterpiece became the cultural exemplum of apocalypse, and a cardinal citation in the time…
ByDeborah Levy, Ben Okri, Ahdaf Soueif and more explore how their lives have changed since the beginning of the…
ByHow Friedrich’s late masterpiece, The Great Enclosure, offers us a glimpse of the artist’s inner life.
ByThat the composer, whose 250th anniversary is being celebrated this year, overcame deafness to write the greatest music of…
ByHow the novelist hid his cruel side – infidelity, bullying callousness, malice – in plain sight in his fiction.
ByA book saved from a library in Seoul during the Korean War has finally returned home, bringing with it…
ByIn his career-defining Border Trilogy, the late novelist summoned the ghosts of America’s bloody history.
ByPlus: the return of Ant-Man.
By“Big White Day” and “Ghost Signs”
ByA short story by Helen Dunmore.
ByIn the 1960s, the Lancashire town was a bellwether for the decline of the industrial north – struggling with a…
ByThe torment of chronic insomnia.
ByAdvertising, once a creative industry, is now a data-driven business reliant on algorithms. The implications are deeply sinister –…
ByLaurie Santos’s controversial class on “the good life” is Yale University’s most popular course ever. But can you really…
ByFrom David Baddiel’s Billy Bunter obsession to Audrey Niffenegger’s fascination with taxidermy – writers reflect on what it means…
ByImagine a slim bird like a big swift, one as long as your hand from wrist to fingertip, and…
ByWith the Conservatives in chaos, a “People’s Vote” on the final deal is becoming a real possibility. But would…
ByDouglas Murray’s bestseller The Strange Death of Europe claims mass immigration is to blame for the continent’s “suicide”. But…
ByNo set hours, no guaranteed income, and with limited ability to negotiate their working conditions or pay.
ByThe 1920s was a decade of swindles – and one con artist out-tricked them all.
ByThis novel is set in the near future, in a Britain that has finally, absolutely broken free from the…
ByFrom fairy tales to non-fiction.
ByThe shard was thrown on a rubbish tip, lay there for centuries and discovered the same time as Tutankhamun’s tomb.
ByThe 49-year-old is nothing like Gerry Adams, and hopes to take the Republican party somewhere it has never been…
BySuch is its status as a major world city that London’s economy would barely skip a beat.
ByDebora Barrios-Vasquez has not been able to leave the church since 14 May, when she sought sanctuary there to avoid…
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from Westminster.
ByTwenty years ago “four northern lads” brought their blackly comic vision of small-town life to our screens. Now the…
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByWhat connects all the possible outcomes of Brexit is that the British people voted for none of them.
ByJohnson’ bluster and declamatory style simply do not work in the chamber, where he shrinks just when he ought…
ByIn this often bewildering and chaotic world, collections can lend our lives meaning, purpose and order.
ByThe Compass: Living With Nature explores plains, desert, mountain and forest.
ByFrom a seductive French police drama to a powerful documentary about a child arsonist.
ByThere is no majority for Theresa May’s “Chequers deal”, nor for any other conceivable agreement.
ByThis NHS drama is his brightest, tightest and most satisfying play since 1991’s The Madness of George III.
ByThe Victorian “Queen of Ices” has a good claim to have invented the cornet.
ByI am expecting a visitor, and I would like to give her the impression that I am actually a…
ByI know protesting doesn’t change anyone’s mind, but it’s about sending a message.
ByDoctors often get gut instincts about cases; we knew something significant was going on.
ByThe entrepreneur talks ballooning world records, Yuval Noah Harari, and his love of Blue Planet II.
ByThis sequel has a more reflective tone than the banger-a-minute original, but you can’t deny its charms.
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