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The Spectator

10 October 2015 Aus

How Putin outwitted the West

His cynical statecraft in Syria has run rings around Britain and America

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Lingua malcolma

There is a breath of fresh air that has wafted through our political system over the last three weeks, ushering…

Australian Columnists

Australian Notes

Australian notes

There are elements of a fairy story, as the Mayor of Paris noted, in the marriage the other day of…

Columnists Australia

Business/Robbery etc

Psst! How about a 10 per cent return from BHP?

Australian Features

Features Australia

Tony’s Shy Tories

Malcolm Turnbull is fooling himself if he doesn’t recognise the silent support for Tony Abbott

Features Australia

Someone’s knockin’ at the door…

Two recent cases highlight the inconsistencies of who we choose to let in

Features Australia

Lolita turns 60

In the era of ‘trigger warnings’ and PC censorship, would Lolita be as seductive today?

Features Australia

Domestic violence beat up

The feminist-approved, media-driven ‘gender’ agenda is ignoring where the real problems lie

Features

Notebook

Sorry, America, but it looks like Joe Biden is your next president

Plus: Bloomberg, Kissinger and me; Hillary Clinton’s Peronist path to power

Features

Women are still scared to talk about IVF. Let’s change that

Stigma and superstition are confining a crucial, life-changing conversation to coy and cutesy internet forums

Features

Why Carly Fiorina (probably) can’t save the Republicans

The former HP boss is just the kind of woman the party base loves – and that other Americans are scared of

Features

I invented ‘virtue signalling’. Now it’s taking over the world

It’s a true privilege to have coined a phrase – even if people credit it to Libby Purves instead

Look out below: one of The Hague’s gargoyles

Notes on...

Look beyond ‘Girl with a Pearl Earring’ in The Hague

Holland’s most painterly city is beautiful in autumn

Features

This year, Catholic conservatives are ready for Pope Francis

His Synod on the Family may not be the big reforming step he expects

Features

How Putin outwitted the West

His Syrian intervention has made Obama and Cameron look weak and confused

The Week

From The Archives

Bulgarian tragedy

From ‘Bulgaria and Greece’, The Spectator, 9 October 1915: The fact that the British people will in all probability soon be…

Barometer

Barometer

The death of Diesel The Volkswagen scandal has brought into question the future of the diesel engine. A century ago…

Diary

Edmund de Waal’s diary: Selling nothing, and why writers need ping-pong

Plus: Literary speed dating at Yale, and an installation near Salisbury

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home David Cameron, the Prime Minister, told  the Conservative party conference in Manchester: ‘We need a national crusade to get…

Leading article

This is the Tories’ golden chance to seize the centre ground

Now is the time to show why modern Conservatism is the surest way of bringing about a stronger, fairer society

Ancient and modern

John McDonnell’s true economic guru: the emperor Nero

The shadow chancellor is digging for imaginary treasure. Classicists know how that one turns out

Letters

Australian letters

Conspiracy theory Sir: What happened to the Letters page in this week’s issue? What was the reason for its non-appearance?…

Columnists

Any other business

Finally, a business rates reform! If only I knew what it meant

Plus: George Osborne's cunning pension plan; and the delightful Denis Healey

James Delingpole

A Supreme Court justice and the scary plan to outlaw climate change

An imaginary problem could soon have real consequences in international law

Rod Liddle

Spittle is the only thing Labour has left

I’m perfectly qualified to dispense ‘community justice’ with the loutish protestors at the Tory party conference

Mary Wakefield

Isis takes its British schoolgirl jihadis seriously. Why don’t we?

If the authorities don’t act, the stowaway ‘Isis brides’ of today will be tomorrow’s homing missiles

The Spectator's Notes

Charles Moore’s notes: Boris’s brilliance; Labour’s Joe McCarthy

Plus: The rage of Denis Healey; a clarification for Sir Geoff Palmer; and why there’s no party for my new book

World Politics

The Tories are still anxious to reach out. And that’s a very good sign

They can redefine politics while Labour lurches to the unelectable left

Books

Lead book review

Big is beautiful: A crushing case for brutalism — with the people left out

Elain Harwood’s Space, Hope and Brutalism reflect the heavy impact of its subject, and some of its callousness

Books

The many lives of John Buchan

This remarkable man deserves to be remembered for more than his ‘shocker’ and the film it inspired

The Winter Palace, St Petersburg, 1840, by Ferdinand Victor Perrot (Pushkin Museum)

Books

Hermitage director Mikhail Piotrovsky knows all the secrets of his museum, and he’s keeping them

This committee-ridden tome by the director of the Hermitage doesn’t reveal the beautiful, chaotic place I remember

Books

Proof that the British hardly ever had a stiff upper lip

Thomas Dixon’s Weeping Britannia proves that only empire stemmed the flow of our tears

Books

Allan Massie’s Bordeaux Quartet is truer to Occupied France than any history

End Games in Bordeaux, the final volume, has too much action but some vintage details

W.G. Grace, by W.T. Wilson, 1887: Grace is beginning to show signs of the gluttony that marked his late career

Books

Sport’s first celebrity: W.G. Grace

Amazing Grace and Gilbert: The Last Years of W.G. Grace – two biographies of the cricket Champion

Lead book review

Retracing The Thirty-Nine Steps in Buchan’s beloved Borders

Richard Hannay’s first adventure, now 100 years old, is a pastoral disguised as a thriller

Books

A Mile Down: David Vann’s memoir of a disastrous career at sea

David Vann’s memoir, A Mile Down, about his disastrous career at sea is an irresistible read

Arts

Television

Was BBC1’s Rooney hagiography more scripted reality than documentary?

Plus: why are old people on TV never allowed to behave like old people? BBC4's Close to the Edge reviewed

Radio

I’ve never thought much of John Lennon’s music – until now

Plus: the extraordinary life of Eleanor Roosevelt and the pain of a son’s disappearance

Theatre

It may have a meagre script and no plot but Farinelli and the King is still a major work of art

Plus: Rachel Cusk’s Medea at the Almeida isn’t a bad piece of yuppie soap, but it’s hardly Medea

Opera

Please let’s have more musicals like this Kiss Me, Kate at Opera North

Plus: does Wozzeck work in concert? Zurich Opera's one-night stand at the Royal Festival Hall certainly did

Cinema

They do more than just ninny about in elaborate hats, thank Christ: Suffragette reviewed

There are clunky script moments, and the plot is at times soapily manipulative, but Carey Mulligan's face saves the day

Exhibitions

Why did Goya’s sitters put up with his brutal honesty?

In the National Gallery’s new exhibition, Goya: The Portraits, you see a talented provincial become a modern master

Cinema

Cats, whisky and modernity: the J.G. Ballard I knew

'The only truly alien planet is Earth,' Ballard once told me. A new film adaptation of Ballard's High-Rise shows what he meant

Arts feature

Why I’m stepping down after 28 years as The Spectator pop critic

In the past three decades, pop's place in culture has changed drastically, drifting out of reach and away from people's lives

Culture Buff

Culture buff

It’s a fairly assertive title: The Greats -Masterpieces of the National Galleries of Scotland. The assertiveness is justified; the galleries…

Life

High life

Blood, sand and tragedy in Papa Hemingway and Ava Gardner country

Parties such as the one I’ve just been to in Seville will soon be gone with the wind

Low life

Happiness is a chainsaw and a maul in the rain and the mud

Provence in the rain is as miserable as anywhere else but Charlie came to the rescue with his power tool

Real life

I rode my own racehorse and was changed for ever

I have always felt I can trust my horse with my life; that day I found out exactly what that meant

Long life

Oh, how I will miss the plastic bag!

Its demise may be a rare and heartening sign of our lack of selfishness but life will never be so easy again

Bridge

Bridge

There’s no doubt about it: I’m an addict. A BBO addict. Since the Bermuda Bowl began, nearly a fortnight ago,…

Chess

Black death

Joseph Henry Blackburne was the leading British tournament player towards the end of the 19th century. It could be said…

Chess puzzle

Puzzle no. 382

White to play. This is from Blackburne-Schwarz, Berlin 1881. What is the best way to deal with the knight check?…

Competition

Threesome

In Competition No. 2918 you were invited to submit a poem composed entirely of three-letter words. ‘This is the most…

Crossword

2232: Ups and downs

The unclued lights, in one case paired, are all suggested by a thematic phrase (two words), which is set out…

Crossword solution

To 2229: Gnome

The PROVERB (35) (in ODQ), associated with the KENNEDY (19) FAMILY (31), was ‘A rising tide lifts all boats’. EDIT…

Mind your language

The weird truth about the word ‘normal’

Praise, insult, sexual euphemism – what an extraordinary range of meaning

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: How can girls avoid freezing in cold marquees?

Also, how to tell people they have a massive blackhead, and how to deal with good friends who are bad musicians

The Wiki Man

We let programmers run our lives. So how’s their moral code?

When unethical behaviour is embedded in software, as it was at VW, bosses often don’t have a clue

Status anxiety

What I learnt trying to buy lunch for an anti-Tory protestor

This wasn’t a ‘Trot’ or an ‘anarchist’; this was an ordinary woman re-engaged by Corbyn-mania