
Personal Story: My mother’s last words
I often wonder if my novels would be different if she was still alive. If her voice was still…
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
I often wonder if my novels would be different if she was still alive. If her voice was still…
ByAfter the 1918 flu outbreak killed 50 million, nations created new organisations to fight infection. But in an age of…
ByThe murder of two young people on London Bridge last year was the latest atrocity by a follower of…
ByThe British Library Sound Archive preserves millions of audio recordings for future generations. But what does the past sound…
ByA major retrospective of the artist and director’s work reveals a master of the uncanny.
ByThis isn’t a close analysis of WeWork’s financial problems. It’s far sillier. The best moments are pure colour.
ByThis film about anti-depressive plants has an atmosphere of horticultural dread.
ByAmericast is completely addictive for its on-the-ground details of the campaign trail.
ByFor all its spills and thrills and delightful cameo performances, I felt distracted and a little bored.
ByThere is no separating the artist and the art in Tom Stoppard’s Leopoldstadt, which draws directly on his life as…
ByBorn out of Germany’s industrial heartland, Kraftwerk’s epic electronic pop did not just soundtrack a decade: it created a…
ByThis novel based in fact spans the divide of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
ByWhen Hashi Mohamed arrived in the UK at nine years old, he was an unaccompanied minor who couldn’t speak…
ByA new poem by Will Eaves.
ByLike other poets who write non-fiction, Christle favours a fragmentary style in this history of crying.
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByThe malevolent swagger of the Assad regime is the consequence of grievous Western policy errors.
BySome of the biggest policy blunders of the past 250 years can be blamed on Whitehall’s dominant department.
ByGillian Darley on snobbery and the many landscapes of London’s neighbour.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByThe epidemic is a canvas on to which people’s deepest fears and prejudices are being projected.
ByAmong all of her television success, Flack was known for one thing: being a public punching bag.
ByI do like to see ‘umble, ordinary northern clubs doing well.
ByTake the one-star Amazon review of one of my books: “I’m sure the recipes are perfectly useable but as…
ByIn new Netflix documentary Miss Americana, we watch Swift’s need to please people build up, both motivating and sometimes crushing her.
ByIf I had stayed one more night in that flat, I would have died.
ByThe former Oxfam CEO talks Michelle Obama, Divided: Why We’re Living in an Age of Walls and life lessons from…
ByThe club has never quite managed to shed the rags of restless victimhood.
ByThe government has some big ideas, but its purpose is the re-establishment of democracy and the creation of the…
BySuddenly seeing an outdated version of ourselves makes remembrance uncanny, and often painful
ByNorthern Ireland has a bright future, but it needs an inclusive, responsive vision for the Union that offers real benefits, as well as some…
ByThe former New York mayor would resurrect a failed policy settlement and merely fiddle with the symptoms of inequality.
ByContrary to public perception, Rishi Sunak is not Johnson’s second choice for chancellor, but his third.
ByThe club has never quite managed to shed the rags of restless victimhood.
ByThe government has some big ideas, but its purpose is the re-establishment of democracy and the creation of the…
BySuddenly seeing an outdated version of ourselves makes remembrance uncanny, and often painful
ByNorthern Ireland has a bright future, but it needs an inclusive, responsive vision for the Union that offers real benefits, as well as some…
ByAmong all of her television success, Flack was known for one thing: being a public punching bag.
ByThis isn’t a close analysis of WeWork’s financial problems. It’s far sillier. The best moments are pure colour.
BySome of the biggest policy blunders of the past 250 years can be blamed on Whitehall’s dominant department.
ByGillian Darley on snobbery and the many landscapes of London’s neighbour.
ByLike other poets who write non-fiction, Christle favours a fragmentary style in this history of crying.
ByA new poem by Will Eaves.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByThe epidemic is a canvas on to which people’s deepest fears and prejudices are being projected.
ByWhen Hashi Mohamed arrived in the UK at nine years old, he was an unaccompanied minor who couldn’t speak…
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByThis film about anti-depressive plants has an atmosphere of horticultural dread.
ByFor all its spills and thrills and delightful cameo performances, I felt distracted and a little bored.
ByThe former New York mayor would resurrect a failed policy settlement and merely fiddle with the symptoms of inequality.
ByAmericast is completely addictive for its on-the-ground details of the campaign trail.
ByContrary to public perception, Rishi Sunak is not Johnson’s second choice for chancellor, but his third.
ByThe malevolent swagger of the Assad regime is the consequence of grievous Western policy errors.
ByTake the one-star Amazon review of one of my books: “I’m sure the recipes are perfectly useable but as…
ByIn new Netflix documentary Miss Americana, we watch Swift’s need to please people build up, both motivating and sometimes crushing her.
ByIf I had stayed one more night in that flat, I would have died.
ByI do like to see ‘umble, ordinary northern clubs doing well.
ByThe former Oxfam CEO talks Michelle Obama, Divided: Why We’re Living in an Age of Walls and life lessons from…
ByThere is no separating the artist and the art in Tom Stoppard’s Leopoldstadt, which draws directly on his life as…
By