
Unlike so many cricketers since, W G Grace deserves his legend
Two new books reveal how the multifaceted man behind the 19th century's most famous sporting icon.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Two new books reveal how the multifaceted man behind the 19th century's most famous sporting icon.
ByFrom the kibbutz to halfway houses, progressive idealists have long championed living communally. Tobias Jones, who lives with a…
ByBritain’s openness to world markets has direct social and economic costs, as the crisis in Britain's steel industry shows.
By“Mum,” I said, “they don’t employ me because of what I look like. It’s for what I write.” She…
ByYou do not see men my age serving people any more - unless it is in the haberdashery department of…
ByUhtred doesn’t know if he fancies shepherd’s pie or gravadlax. For some reason, I'm in thrall.
ByWhen Liotard came to England, Sir Joshua Reynolds sniffed at his pastels. A new Royal Academy exhibition shows just how…
By"And through its stems the creatures/track their errands"
ByIn future years, we will speak of Sinophiles and Sinophobes as we do now of Europhiles and Europhobes.
ByMan of mystery Michael Ashcroft’s dramatic announcement that he’d cheated death was worthy of James Bond’s nemesis Blofeld.
ByThis is what human beings do. We wander over landscapes, whether terrestrial, cosmic or conceptual, looking for something different,…
ByWho knows, if things keep on this way, Britain may well become the sort of country where the outcome of…
ByIt’s a national handicap: a survey a couple of years ago claimed that 38 per cent of us would never…
ByCity on Fire is not bad, but it also is not great - and it might have been if it had…
ByThe Silo Effect: Why Putting Everything in Its Place Isn’t Such a Bright Idea by Gillian Tett gives an insight into…
ByOne of the great liberal thinkers of the post-war period, Affirming: Letters 1975-97 makes clear the continuing relevance of Berlin's thought.
ByThe ancient network across central Asia shaped trade and culture for centuries. Now, as its economy slows, China is…
ByHe noted that, after the Munich beer hall putsch, Hitler had been jailed for six months and “thereafter fad[ed]…
ByIn Sweden, Josefsson says, the idea that people with repressed memories of abuse could be helped was “an idea…
ByBy the time he stands down, David Cameron's Britain will be neo-Georgian – a country that is, in effect, governed by a coterie…
ByFrom the kibbutz to halfway houses, progressive idealists have long championed communal living. Tobias Jones, who lives with a…
ByWounded Tiger: a History of Cricket in Pakistan and The Unquiet Ones: a History of Pakistan Cricket trace the challenges…
ByFor all the hype, the Chinese president Xi Jinping’s visit was merely the latest in a series of attempts to get the…
ByNadya Tolokonnikova, of female punk protest collective Pussy Riot, on the danger of UK conservatism, living in Moscow, and…
ByEven if grammar schools could eliminate social bias from their recruitment – so that each social class was represented…
ByStanley Nelson's new film doesn’t shake our suspicion that the stories being told have calcified into legend. Plus: Fresh Dressed.
ByI still have it, in a box in a cupboard at home – a six-inch garden gnome holding a…
ByThe Road to Little Dribbling: More Notes from a Small Island recreates the jouney of Bryson's 20-year-old bestseller.
ByWork-life balance is a myth. It’s time for women to stop blaming themselves and start demanding change.
ByAnd so to the Frankfurt Book Fair.
ByKlopp at the Kop.
ByCapturing live opera demands more than a series of mikes attached to the lapels of singers and someone pressing…
ByNorthern Ireland and Wales will make their mark in France next summer.
ByAfter Iraq and Afghanistan, Britain has re-entered a period of unresolved purpose.
ByWhat Joseph Conrad started, John le Carré enshrined and made modern.
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