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Truly inspirational: the hospital diary of Hanif Kureishi

2 November 2024 9:00 am

‘My world has been smashed...and there is nothing I can do about’, writes Kureishi of the freak accident in 2022 that has left him paralysed. ‘But I will not go under. I will make something of it’

The many passions of Ronald Blythe

2 November 2024 9:00 am

Some he kept hidden, such as his affairs with soldiers in the second world war, but his love of nature, literature, naked sunbathing and moonlit bicycling are all well-attested

Out of the depths: Dante’s Purgatorio, by Philip Terry, reviewed

2 November 2024 9:00 am

Having toured the infernal campus of the University of Essex, Terry arrives at the coast, to be confronted by a strange artificial mountain which he now must climb

You didn’t mess with them – the doughty matriarchs of the intelligence world

2 November 2024 9:00 am

Claire Hubbard-Hall pays tribute to the legions of women who devoted their lives to the British secret service but whose efforts went largely unacknowledged

A geriatric Lord of the Flies: Killing Time, by Alan Bennett, reviewed

2 November 2024 9:00 am

Chaos reigns at an old people’s home when Covid strikes, but the more rebellious residents won’t take the situation lying down

All human life – and death – is here: the British parish church

2 November 2024 9:00 am

As a skilled stonemason, Andrew Ziminski has dug deep into the fabric of countless churches and can explain every conceivable aspect, from baptismal fonts to gravestones

‘I like it when my pupils run the world’: a celebration of Jeremy Catto

2 November 2024 9:00 am

The convivial Oxford don who died in 2018 is remembered by his many devoted students, who include bankers, barristers, diplomats and politicians as well as other distinguished historians

They weren’t all scheming poisoners: the maligned women of imperial Rome

2 November 2024 9:00 am

Joan Smith criticises the distortions of Robert Graves in particular, whose villainisation of the empress Livia had no historical basis whatever

Wondrous treasure troves: the Jewish country houses of Europe

2 November 2024 9:00 am

Among the greatest collectors was Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild, whose furniture, paintings and objets at Waddesdon Manor rivalled those of many museums

Conspiracy theories are as old as witch hunts

26 October 2024 9:00 am

To millions of people across America, Hillary Clinton sits atop a global network of satanic child-traffickers and is battling an…

From street urchin to superstar: the unlikely career of Al Pacino

26 October 2024 9:00 am

Ellen Barkin, Al Pacino’s lover-cum-prime- suspect in his comeback movie Sea of Love (1989), once dismissed the artifice of the…

An otherworldly London: The Great When, by Alan Moore, reviewed

26 October 2024 9:00 am

Is occult knowledge even possible in the age of the internet? If a recondite author obsessed you back in the…

Doctor in trouble: Time of the Child, by Niall Williams, reviewed

26 October 2024 9:00 am

In the early 1960s, glimmers of change start to appear in the Irish ‘backwater’ parish of Faha. A smuggled copy…

Why must medieval mysticism be treated as a malady?

26 October 2024 9:00 am

Medieval women – they were ‘just like us’. Except that they weren’t. Poet, Mystic, Widow, Wife is the first popular…

The enduring mystery of Goethe’s Faust

26 October 2024 9:00 am

A.N. Wilson has never been afraid of big subjects. His previous books have tackled the Victorians, Charles Dickens, Dante, Jesus…

The stark, frugal world of Piet Mondrian

26 October 2024 9:00 am

In September 1940 the Dutch abstract artist Piet Mondrian arrived in New York, a refugee from war and the London…

The journalist’s journalist: the irrepressible Claud Cockburn

19 October 2024 9:00 am

After a distinguished spell on the Times, Cockburn launched The Week in 1933, whose scoops on Nazi Germany became essential reading for politicians, diplomats and journalists alike

The court favourite who became the most hated man in England

19 October 2024 9:00 am

Lucy Hughes-Hallett traces the brief, dramatic career of the handsome Duke of Buckingham – scapegoat for the early Stuarts’ extravagance and incompetence

A scorched Earth: Juice, by Tim Winton, reviewed

19 October 2024 9:00 am

Winton’s teenage Australian protagonist is recruited by the sinister Service organisation in its crusade against the billionaires whose profiteering has cooked the planet

The rollercoaster ride of the world’s most reckless investor

19 October 2024 9:00 am

The Korean-born Masayoshi Son – who lost $58.6 billion in 2000 – has a fascination with Napoleon, compares himself to Genghis Khan and is now reinventing himself as a futurist

The magic of carefully crafted words

19 October 2024 9:00 am

A collection of essays, poems and fiction – ‘offcuts’ of a lifetime spent ‘working with a pen’ – marks Alan Garner’s 90th year

Whipping up a masterpiece: painters and their materials

19 October 2024 9:00 am

Martin Gayford finds artists from Rembrandt to De Kooning mixing pigment, egg and oil together with all the skill of an accomplished chef

Mounting suspicion: The Fate of Mary Rose, by Caroline Blackwood, reviewed

19 October 2024 9:00 am

Terror and distrust build in the Anderson family after a six-year-old girl is found murdered in a quiet Kent village

And still the colonial memoirs keep coming…

19 October 2024 9:00 am

Peter Godwin’s third volume to date – of a family in various stages of decline after leaving their African homeland – is redeemed by its vivid evocations and erudition