
Commons confidential: Old friend or foe?
Kevin Maguire's weekly dose of Westminster gossip.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Kevin Maguire's weekly dose of Westminster gossip.
ByHow unrest exploded in 1917 – with help from Russia’s Terrible Twins.
ByMaking a case by rendering the contrary one manifestly absurd is Eagleton’s compulsive mode of argument.
ByJames Gleick's Time Travel: A History offers hope and nostalgia.
ByAdam Kirsch on Daniel Swift's The Bughouse: the Poetry, Politics and Madness of Ezra Pound.
ByDead relatives, death-filled homes, rural wanderings fill Sara Baume's haunting new novel.
ByIn her latest work, Fiona Sampson’s verse is alive to musicality.
ByIn her memoir of depression and reading, Yiyun Li speaks to all those with unquiet minds.
ByThe British Museum's new exhibition reveals the resilience of First Nations culture.
ByUpcoming releases include drama about a trans woman and an adventure in south America.
ByThis alternate history is freighted with meaning now we're facing the wurst-case scenario.
ByThe actor's prickly character in Sideways - a film about wine buffs - made us appreciate this tricky grape.
ByNicholas Lezard's Down and Out.
ByOff the Record.
ByWatching a game on tenterhooks to see if the manager picks his nose.
ByI sensed a woman who wasn’t wild about her assignment. Perhaps she’d once been traumatised by a comma.
ByWhat We Do Now and On Tyranny by Timothy Snyder.
ByThe German Eurocrat is the biggest threat to the possibility of a fourth term for Merkel.
ByA Japanese lesson in the paradox of productivity.
ByWhy smog is causing social unrest.
ByOne does not have to agree with Tony Blair to respect his right to make an anti-Brexit argument.
ByAs I approach the whips’ office through the tearoom staircase, a colleague shouts: “It’s Steve McQueen!”
ByThe Arsenal manager faces a frustrating legacy.
ByHow a new African-American history museum reveals the changing face of the US capital.
ByThe French presidential candidate has been compared with a young Tony Blair.
ByHow internet sleuths - and secret courts - have changed the reporting of miscarriages of justice.
ByHow a shake-up of the leadership team has steadied nerves at the top of Labour.
ByThe other 27 governments in the EU may struggle to maintain a common line once the phoney war ends.
ByThe crucial variable is not British power but the weakness of Europe.
By