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Jokes and reminiscences

18 January 2023 10:00 pm

Edi is dying of ovarian cancer and she’s craving the lemon cake she once got from Dean & Deluca deli…

Be like the rhinoceros

18 January 2023 10:00 pm

In the penultimate entry of Toby Litt’s A Writer’s Diary, an autofictional daily record of a writer named Toby Litt…

Amerindians abroad

18 January 2023 10:00 pm

The most influential Native American visitor to Europe in colonial times was a fiction. The protagonist of L’Ingénu, Voltaire’s novel…

Addicted to violence

14 January 2023 9:00 am

The X-rated movies he’d seen by the age of ten included Deliverance, Taxi Driver and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre – which he’d then discuss with his child psychologist

‘God blew and they were scattered’

14 January 2023 9:00 am

According to a new history of the Spanish Armada, Elizabeth I was chiefly to blame for the crisis of 1588

Lofty ideals and messy realities

14 January 2023 9:00 am

Despite the leader’s commitment to secularism and democracy, the persecution of Muslims and Dalits continued after independence

Strange affinities

14 January 2023 9:00 am

Giulia retreats to her isolated farmhouse to avoid bombardment in Turin, and grows increasingly attached to the partisan couple she shelters

When mercy seasons justice

14 January 2023 9:00 am

The former Lord Chief Justice confesses that some of his liberal ideas didn’t turn out so well in practice

Fatal attraction

14 January 2023 9:00 am

Hettie Judah describes how its various owners were plagued by bankruptcy, divorce, suicide, madness – and savaging by wild dogs

Change and decay

14 January 2023 9:00 am

Steam trains, historic monuments and the family grocer were replaced by motorways, tower blocks and supermarkets. But at least there was humaner legislation

Come buy, come buy

14 January 2023 9:00 am

Unfairly dismissed as hucksters and fishwives, itinerant traders drove the capital’s expansion for centuries, says Charlie Taverner

Ancient roots

14 January 2023 9:00 am

Guy Shrubsole laments that the temperate rainforest that once covered a fifth of Britain has now shrunk to pitiful fragments on its western fringe

Man on the run

14 January 2023 9:00 am

How long can a fugitive avoid detection after holing up in a city ‘big enough to be anonymous in’?

Jesus the radical

14 January 2023 9:00 am

David Lloyd Dusenbury finds Jesus a ‘philosophically intriguing’ figure – and much bigger than a ‘mere’ revolutionary

Surprise! Surprise!

7 January 2023 9:00 am

For centuries, grammarians considered it vulgar and warned against using it too freely – but Jane Austen saw the point of it, says Florence Hazrat

Queen of Hollywood

7 January 2023 9:00 am

Kate Andersen Brower has had access to the vast, unpublished archive of Hollywood’s queen - famed for her beauty, diamonds and unhappy marriages

Luminous fables

7 January 2023 9:00 am

A downcast cellist discovers that his music cures sick mice and rabbits in one of many tales featuring talking animals in eerie, folkloric landscapes

I will survive

7 January 2023 9:00 am

Separated from her husband, Constance trains herself to be ‘indestructible’ while awaiting a ruling over custody of their son

A bird with one wing

7 January 2023 9:00 am

James Runcie’s harrowing account of his wife’s last days during lockdown includes blackly comic descriptions of trying to follow nursing instructions on YouTube

Rage over ragù

7 January 2023 9:00 am

Luca Cesari argues that pasta is a living thing, changing with the times, and has never been bound by tradition, as the vigilante nonnas insist

A mystifying miscellany

7 January 2023 9:00 am

Most of the 66 songs he discusses in a collection of meditative essays date from the late 1940s to the advent of punk – a movement that evidently passed him by

Lord of the dance

7 January 2023 9:00 am

Balanchine described himself as ‘a cloud in trousers’ – and Jennifer Homans perfectly captures the earthly man and his ethereal gift

Staying power

7 January 2023 9:00 am

Authoritarian regimes that have emerged out of violent social revolutions have survived on average three times as long as their non-revolutionary counterparts

Doing good business

7 January 2023 9:00 am

Ever since the societas publicanorum, corporations have been linked with the common good, carrying out projects for which the state is ill-equipped

Spot the book title

17 December 2022 9:00 am

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