The Spectator
2 August 2014 Aus
Australia
Ukrainian quagmire
‘We will not be deterred in our efforts to get on to that site and retrieve the bodies of Australians…
Australian Columnists
Brown Study
The success of Tony Abbott and Julie Bishop in handling the aftermath of the ghastly events in Ukraine has been…
Australian notes
You lookin’ for Joe?’ asked the road-worker, probably one of Joe’s constituents, as I parked and cast around for the…
Diary Australia
Like Ray Charles and nearly as short-sighted, a couple of years ago I moved to the outskirts of town. I’m…
Australian Features
Dark star
Hugo Weaving is scarily good in Sydney Theatre Company’s innovative reworking of Macbeth
Aussie superheros
It’s time to tap into our rich comic-book heritage and make some movies, starting with The Southern Squadron
Ming was not a nationalist
Conservative revisionists and Liberal partisans can’t accept that Sir Robert Menzies was an empire man
So much for the claimthat Labor is reformist
Once again, Bill Shorten lets down the true believers
Features
Lest we remember
My country has worked hard to come to terms with the second world war. That seems to have meant ignoring the first
Porn-again parents
Society's anxiety about online porn has been so focused on the young that its impact on the older generation has gone largely unnoticed
Brilliant mistakes
Some of the most important creative steps forward begin simply as misunderstandings
No tea or sympathy
A toxic mixture of cost-cutting and ideology seems to have put a limit on tea and sympathy
When the Germans won
This week's other great historical anniversary: the Hanoverian accession
The Week
Unfair welfare
Other countries manage to implement sensible systems without being rebuked by the EU. It's time we learnt from them
Portrait of the week
Home Britain is to halve to three months the time that EU migrants without realistic job prospects can claim benefits,…
Hadrian on the limits of power
Either you must dominate completely, the emperor found, or give people their freedom. And we can only afford the second option
Columnists
One last sleepy summer, then the fighting starts
Once the Scottish referendum is over, the party leaders face a battle for which none seems fully prepared
Take it from an ex-slut: this is PC lunacy
Another week of witless moral relativism at its most deluding
The eternal beauty of John Clare
Clare’s poetry is strange, intense, wonderfully sensuous – and magical
Sanctions rarely work, but they might make oligarchs whisper in Putin’s ear
Plus: What should be in bankers’ version of the Hippocratic Oath?
Books
Taking no prisoners
A review of Wilhelm II: Into the Abyss of War and Exile, 1900-1941, by John C.G. Röhl, translated by Sheila de Bellaigue and Roy Bridge. The anachronistic, racist and militaristic German monarch hastened his country’s self-destruction
Money to burn
A review of Empty Mansions, by Bill Dedman and Paul Clark Newell, Jr, a materialistic, yet hypnotic bestseller about W.A. Clark, one of the most ruthless accumulators of wealth in American history
Bachelor girl
A review of Dusty: An Intimate Portrait, by Karen Bartlett. The sexually repressed and mentally unstable singer’s rise to stardom was as meteoric as her fall
Derring-do in Salonica
A review of The Birdcage, by Clive Aslet. This Ripping Yarns version of British trench warfare makes for an entertaining – if not entirely serious - read
Bribery and seduction
A review of Britannia and the Bear, by Victor Madeira. This survey of interwar Soviet spying offers many lessons on how we deal with Putin’s Russia
Pussy’s in the well
Peggy Angus: Designer, Teacher, Painter, by James Russell. Angus’s playful, naïve designs were rich and strange, as were her politics
A choice of recent crime fiction
A review of four very readable new thrillers: Research by Philip Kerr, Remember Me This Way by Sabine Durrant, The Final Silence by Stuart Neville and Cobra by Deon Meyer.
The green opium of the people
A review of The Forbidden Game: Golf and the Chinese Dream, by Dan Washburn. A book about money, power and whim that tells you everything you need to know about modern China
A life derailed
A review of Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage, by Haruki Murakami, translated by Philip Gabriel. It’s impressive that such a brilliant myth emerges from such unspectacular ingredients
Muslim integration
Growing up is hard enough at any time; coping with additional cross-currents of race and religion is a whole new…
Arts
Four years of war
The ambitious new series, Home Front, will run from 2014 and 2018, creating ‘a patchwork of impressionistic stories from the war’
Sheer delight
The Tate’s new show of Brobdingnagian shop signs, evocative stitchery, glorious figureheads from ships and collaged pictures is both timely and hideously overdue
Voice of enchantment
Some of my most enjoyable evenings, when I reviewed opera weekly for The Spectator, were spent at the Royal College…
Pitch perfect
Plus: a preview of two strongly contrasting works by John Tavener that will premiere at the Proms
There will be blood
Plus: a summer festival offering from the Arcola that, despite being aimed at the lumpen trustafariat, high on MDMA, is pretty good
All whimsied out
How much you enjoy Michel Gondry’s film all depends on your tolerance for visual whimsy
Trigger happy
Plus: Andrew Graham-Dixon uncovers a 3,000-year-old depiction of the Tiger Mother in The Art of China
Commonwealth connections
Plus: a Radio 2 music drama that gets lost in translation moving to Radio 4
We will remember them
An English Heritage exhibition atop Wellington Arch explores six London memorials
Life
Treasure Island
As I write, young Jonathan Hawkins has stormed into the lead in the British Championship in Aberystwyth with the tremendous…
no. 325
White to play. This position is from Rogers-Milos, Manila Olympiad 1992. White is a mass of material down but the…
Hidden talent
In Competition No. 2858 you were invited to imagine that a well-known figure from 20th-century history was a secret poet…
2173: Men of note
The unclued lights are of a specific kind. Across 11 Top flier backs help for sloth (6)…
to 2170: Hector’s summer nights
The unclued lights are the titles of the six movements of Nuits d’Eté (Summer Nights in translation) by Hector Berlioz:…
A noble tradition of benign neglect
'Jemima, Otis and Cooper,' said the walkie-talkie, 'it's time for you to go to bed'
Holiday kit – should it stay or should it go?
In the age of the Kindle, holiday reading is a simpler question. But there’s a new packing dilemma in its place


































































