More from Books
Jokes and reminiscences
Edi is dying of ovarian cancer and she’s craving the lemon cake she once got from Dean & Deluca deli…
Be like the rhinoceros
In the penultimate entry of Toby Litt’s A Writer’s Diary, an autofictional daily record of a writer named Toby Litt…
Amerindians abroad
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
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’
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
Despite the leader’s commitment to secularism and democracy, the persecution of Muslims and Dalits continued after independence
Strange affinities
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
The former Lord Chief Justice confesses that some of his liberal ideas didn’t turn out so well in practice
Fatal attraction
Hettie Judah describes how its various owners were plagued by bankruptcy, divorce, suicide, madness – and savaging by wild dogs
Change and decay
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
Unfairly dismissed as hucksters and fishwives, itinerant traders drove the capital’s expansion for centuries, says Charlie Taverner
Ancient roots
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
How long can a fugitive avoid detection after holing up in a city ‘big enough to be anonymous in’?
Jesus the radical
David Lloyd Dusenbury finds Jesus a ‘philosophically intriguing’ figure – and much bigger than a ‘mere’ revolutionary
Surprise! Surprise!
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
Kate Andersen Brower has had access to the vast, unpublished archive of Hollywood’s queen - famed for her beauty, diamonds and unhappy marriages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
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
Separated from her husband, Constance trains herself to be ‘indestructible’ while awaiting a ruling over custody of their son
A bird with one wing
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
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
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
Balanchine described himself as ‘a cloud in trousers’ – and Jennifer Homans perfectly captures the earthly man and his ethereal gift
Staying power
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
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
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