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The Spectator

12 March 2016 Aus

Best served cold

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Best served cold

It is hard to escape the conclusion that the Niki Savva book, reviewed this week by Rebecca Weisser as well…

Diary Australia

Roman Diary

I love Rome. I love how the old is woven into the new, so the ruins of some dead medieval…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Fool’s gold

The Australian Law Reform Commission is wrong.

Features Australia

The mark of Cain

Those Liberals who voted to oust Prime Minister Abbott may come to regret their treachery

Features Australia

Time to stop this politicians’ rort

The Senate voting reforms are essential to restoring democracy to our flawed system

Features Australia

Behaviour unbecoming

Those bigmouths who have spilled the beans on office gossip and scuttlebutt do themselves no favours

Features

Features

Bordering on insanity

We can’t get rid of jihadis, sex gang ringleaders and drug lords – so we try to deport old ladies like Myrtle Cothill

Features

A civilisation under siege

The borders were thrown open and now it’s too late for second thoughts

Features

From Hitler to girls in pearls

‘The bible of the British aristocracy’ lived up to its eccentric reputation

Notebook

American Notebook

Also in Max Hastings’s US notebook: Trump and the triumph of irrationality, and a lament for the washbasin plug

Features

Trudeau family values

Canada’s new PM is a media darling. You can expect that to change when the bill arrives

Features

Americans for Brexit

It’s in our shared interests for Britain to be a more reliable ally. Without its EU entanglements, that’s just what it’ll be

Features

The left will eat itself

The anti-free-speech revolution is devouring its children

Features

Anarchy in the EU

Paul Cook on fame and notoriety, patriotism and the EU

Rebuilding phase: shipping-container shopping in Christchurch

New Zealand, Notes on...

New Zealand

My visit began with a ‘rather strong’ earthquake. But there’s no question the long flight was worth it

The Week

Leading article

Turkey’s blackmail

And the EU is capitulating. That doesn't make David Cameron's referendum task any easier

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home The Bank of England arranged for banks to be able to borrow as much money as they needed around…

Diary

Diary

Susan Hill’s diary: on taking against a book, the death of dear friends, and writing by speaking out loud

Barometer

Barometer

Plus: the price of power at Hinkley Point; and an immigration estimate for if Turkey joins the EU

Ancient and modern

Governor Cameron and the Brussels empire

…and David Cameron is responding like a loyal imperial governor

From The Archives

Against Churchill

From ‘Colonel Churchill’, The Spectator, 11 March 1916: Colonel Churchill is being found out. The charm, once universal, no longer…

Letters

Australian Letters

Money for nothing Sir: The European Union, in its wisdom, announced last week that it would be granting a further…

Columnists

World Politics

Osborne can still see off Boris

If Britain votes against Brexit and the economy stays strong he may yet be the next Prime Minister

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s notes

David Cameron might have done better to stay out of things too

Jenny McCartney

The smelly, snobbish death of the public loo

In England, people dislike talking about lavatories in public. So soon, they will have no public lavatories

James Delingpole

Want to leave the EU? You must be an oik like me

Just as with Thatcherism, it’s the very posh who won’t stand firm

Any other business

This great commodity rally doesn’t mean that spring has arrived

Also in Any Other Business: budget boredom; Bob Dudley; Brics nonsense

Books

Ford Madox Brown celebrates 17th-century advances in science in his painting ‘William Crabtree watches the Transit of Venus in 1639’

Lead book review

Fighting for progress

In The Age of Genius, he awards the 17th and 21st centuries top marks for intellectual progress. But will terrorism relegate our present to also-played?

Books

Wonderful waffle

Like the rest of My Struggle, this fifth volume, with its loving descriptions of everyday life, will be sheer magic to aficionados

Books

A choice of first novels

Merritt Tierce, Sunil Yapa, Ali Eskandarian, Austin Duffy and Paraic O’Donnell take us from the hippy streets of Seattle to the squalid lofts of Brooklyn

The Green Man on a roof boss in Norwich cathedral

Books

Wild man of the woods

Nina Lyon traces his legend from the Roman god Sylvanus, through the Arthurian Green Knight to summer sex-fests and sweetcorn’s Green Giant

Books

Foreign body count

This Census-Taker, Miéville’s new apocalyptic novel, is (apparently) incomplete, definitely downbeat and signifies — who knows?

Harris and Klebold practise at a rifle range two weeks before the Columbine massacre

Books

The ultimate nightmare

In an agonised memoir, Sue Klebold wonders what possible warning signs there were to suggest that her seemingly ordinary son would become a mass murderer

Books

A leap in the dark

Part crime-thriller, part doomed love story, Jordan’s The Drowned Detective is an enthralling novel — which would also make a very good film

Books

Rich and fruity

Eliot’s extensive American tour in 1932–33 came close to being sabotaged when his wife locked up his lecture notes on the eve of his departure

Greta Garbo in New York in 1955

Books

Fifty shades of blue

In this remarkable combination of memoir and art criticism, Laing finds relief from crippling loneliness among the artists of New York’s East Village

Books

Finders keepers

Tiffany Jenkins’s arguments against the return of artefacts to their country of origin inevitably draw strength from the continuing crisis in the Middle East

Books

A topsy-turvy world

The stories in Mr Kafka and Other Tales, reissued after 50 years, are as fresh, funny and incisive as they were when first published

The Bridgeman Art Library

Books

Away with the fairies

Bart Casey brilliantly resurrects this adventurer, diplomat, mystic and spy who impressed Queen Victoria with his ability to commune with fairies

Books

An innocent abroad

Murder, romance and the pursuit of the untranslatable make for a curious but satisfying comedy thriller

Books

About a boy

Ysenda Maxtone Graham fears for the doting mother of Elizabeth Hay’s new family drama if ever her son decides to leave home

The British give the Chinese a taste of their own medicine in the First Opium War

Books

A devilish instrument of war

Having invented gunpowder in the ninth century, China might easily have advanced through Europe. But its reluctance to wage war left it sidelined for centuries, according to Tonio Andrade

Australian Books

Cods wallop

One might hope that as a Hellene, Niki Savva could shed some light on the tragedy of the Abbott government…

Arts

Arts feature

God’s messenger

Damian Thomson talks to the Japanese conductor – and strict Calvinist – about the religious underpinnings of his celebrated Bach recordings

Arts

Paranormal activity

Hilma af Klint may have been the first to abstraction, but was she any good at it? Plus: Barry Flanagan at Waddington Custot Galleries and Eduardo Chillida at Ordovas

Naked ambition: Anthony Roth Costanzo in Philip Glass’s ‘Akhnaten’

Opera

Round-up of new opera

But the collision of disciplines is at its wildest when you leave the opera house completely and venture into the world of music collectives like ARCO and art galleries like DRAF

Theatre

Pride and prejudice

Plus: Hand to God is an aggressive and puerile attack on Christian evangelism – and an ideal present for youngsters

Mirror, mirror: Michael Stone, as voiced by David Thewlis

Cinema

The human factor

It’s hard to know what this Charlie Kaufman stop-motion film is really about but it’ll get right under your skin

Radio

Girl power

For last year’s International Women’s Day, Radio 3 played 24 hours of music by female composers - and it was a revelation

The usual suspects: ‘Doctor Thorne’ brings us a reliable selection of frock-coated and corsetted British thesps

Television

Just what the doctor ordered

Plus: E4’s The Aliens provides the opposite: a messy-to-the-point-of-bonkers sci-fi with undeniable oomph

Culture Buff

Culture Buff

Asked recently whether I thought Opera on the Harbour was really opera, I replied emphatically that it is. No one…

Life

High life

High life

Witnessing the suffering of migrants and Greeks alike, I have murder in my heart

Low life

Low life

Mr Simpston and Mr Gorse reminded me of my time on the railways in the 1970s

Real life

Real life

Whichever bit of a horse you worry about going wrong, another bit goes wronger. As Darcy just reminded me

Long life

Long life

It could also be Isaac Newton, a flock of vengeful chickens – or, and this is my bet, a delusion stoked by his royal connection

Bridge

Bridge

Unless you’re an expert, it often pays to keep quiet at the bridge table — something I really ought to…

Chess

Bunratty

The tournament at Bunratty is Ireland’s premier chess competition and has been for several years. This year’s event, to which…

Chess puzzle

No. 399

Black to play. This position is from Skulte-Pein, Bunratty 2016. Black’s queen is attacked. His next move didn’t force immediate…

Competition

Gray matter

In Competition No. 2938, to mark the tercentenary of Thomas Gray’s birth, you were invited to submit an ‘Elegy on…

Crossword

2251: Animal track

In eight clues, cryptic indications omit reference to parts of answers; these parts must be highlighted, to reveal the title…

Crossword solution

To 2248: In the stars

The starred words in the clues are EYE, RAIL, SAGE, SNAP, TRAP, HIDE, NUTS, GUN, EE. They combine with nine…

Status anxiety

A new taste of Twitter nastiness

I tweeted a picture for World Book Day, and the Twitter brigade went mad

The Wiki Man

What’s the point of the driverless car?

Technologists are obsessed with saving time, but never ask what people will do instead

Dear Mary

Your problems solved

Plus: whether a celebrity friend should dye his hair, and Six Nations etiquette

Drink

A thirst for Justice

Let’s drink to the memory of a judge who elevated common sense to a Platonic idea

Mind your language

Swastika

The more this ancient symbol is removed from harmless uses, the more it will be associated with Nazism alone