
The Tory war without end
The Brexit negotiations are unravelling and Conservative MPs are more convinced than ever the Prime Minister is finished – but they can’t…
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
The Brexit negotiations are unravelling and Conservative MPs are more convinced than ever the Prime Minister is finished – but they can’t…
ByClose finds so many variations on the tight smile of the long-suffering spouse.
ByScotland to London; London to Brighton; Brighton to Salisbury; Salisbury to London; and tomorrow, assuming the trains are running,…
ByMost “astonishing” documentaries rarely are that. But Manson: The Lost Tapes really is disquieting.
ByTranslated with virtuosic precision by Antonia Lloyd-Jones, Tokarczuk’s fiction seethes with the cleansing power of rage
ByThe centuries-old idea of sharing space is today a furious call to action.
ByHaving chopped off that feminine last syllable and most of her hair, “Chris” places the body at the centre…
ByWould a few sips have made her a more tolerant ruler?
ByThe Mail on Sunday columnist, relying on a handful of eccentric studies, argues that September 1939 was the wrong…
ByThere is sand and pebbles and shells, but also the detritus of hundreds of years, stuff that has been…
By“I should have felt sorrow and pity,” Appignanesi writes. Instead, she felt rage.
ByThey sat on their own at the back of the bus, considered either stupid or mad.
ByThe crime novelist on Joe 90, Muriel Spark and the late Labour leader.
ByAllen details countless horrors, including a stalker entering her bedroom at night, waking up as a record industry executive…
ByHow ridiculous, how self-deluding to suggest that any problem with fat is irrational and not because being fat is…
ByMoss’s sensual writing recalls the late Helen Dunmore.
ByNietzsche was overlooked for most of his career. By the time his genius was discovered, his health had rapidly…
ByAs the far right rises across Europe, how can liberal democracies confront populist nationalism? New books by Francis Fukuyama and…
ByIt was a relationship that, as Churchill once remarked, was more like brother and sister than mother and son.
ByDyer has always been a writer for whom talking about something properly and honestly means talking about a lot…
BySouth Korea’s president has to negotiate the competing demands of Trump, Kim Jong-un and China.
ByStill haunted by the spectre of Margaret Thatcher, the Conservative Party has become increasingly reckless as it is pushed towards…
ByMany Kosovan children, now aged 18, were named “Tonibler” by grateful parents in honour of our former PM.
ByParallels between Hill’s case and that of Christine Blasey Ford, who has accused Brett Kavanaugh of sexual harrrassment, are…
ByJourney wrote “Don’t Stop Believin’”, the most downloaded song from the 20th century. When their lead singer quit, the band spent…
ByAn Attenborough for the Anthropocene age.
ByTo the outside world, Macron still appears something of a success. But in France, his approval rating has dropped…
ByThe pick of the best gossip from the 2018 Labour party conference in Liverpool.
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByThe successful policy announcements of 2017 did not emanate from the collective deliberations of party members, but from on high.
ByThis is a “real-life mystery” that begins in a 14th century Austrian castle.
ByThe public will resent the idea of neighbours who work for big companies getting the extra cash.
ByFrom an epic life of Nietzsche to Lily Allen’s brutally honest memoir, the big new releases reviewed.
ByHer Chequers plan commands neither the support of her party nor the European Union.
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