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The Spectator

2 January 2016 Aus

I won’t be Corbyn’s man in London . . .

Sadiq Khan is fighting the mayoral battle his way, but he’s still very much on the left

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Sweet 2016

There is much to look forward to, and indeed much to be grateful for, as we embark upon the adventure…

Australian Columnists

Australian Notes

Australian notes

The Prime Minister’s Literary Awards in Sydney the other day was an entirely different bouilloire de poissons from the presentation…

Simon Collins

Manchester reunion

One of the enduring benefits of emigrating at an early age is that you are not expected to attend school…

Diary Australia

Australian diary

The Paris climate conference venue is a sight to behold. Over 40,000 people crowd into the temporary venue created using…

Australian Features

Features Australia

One of the immortals

I feel I have lost part of myself with the death of Harry Butler at the age of 85. Though…

Features Australia

Cat on a hot petal roof

Architect Amanda Levete brings a feline elegance to Melbourne’s MPavilion

Features

Features

I won’t be Corbyn’s man in London . . .

The Labour candidate is fighting the mayoral battle his way, but he’s still very much on the left

Features

. . . and I won’t be Boris Mark II

The Tory mayoral contender explains how he plans to sell himself to a city that’s now solidly Labour

Features

Bye, George

Respect has dwindled, his mayoral campaign has failed to catch fire, and several groups of investigators are circling…

Features

Where’s the joy gone?

Britain seems to be suffering from a dearth of lightheartedness

Features

From Celtic tiger to pussycat

You can see the legacy of the Celtic Tiger years, in good roads and boarded-up shops, but something different is now abroad

Features

How to spot a charity snake

How do you know if a charity is changing lives? The government clearly has no idea

Features

Planet of the canapés

Let’s get rid of these ridiculous thimble-sized offerings

Notebook

Benghazi notebook

Peter Oborne’s letter from Libya

Features

Pacific Islands: The wildest time

This is the most compelling wildlife destination on Earth

Still standing: the Arc de Triomphe

Features

France: #ToutsAuBistrot!

The city’s mood right now is enough to make Julie Burchill love the French

Features

United Arab Emirates: Leaves in the desert

There are an increasing number of reasons, even if the sheikh doesn’t buy all the books himself this time

A trullo: kids love them

Features

The pleasures of Puglia

It’s cheaper than Chiantishire, and the touristy bits are touristy in an authentically Italian way

Cypress swamp alongside the river

Features

United States: Deep South, full strength

Welcome to the land of Elvis, Faulkner and the blues trail

Features

Faroe Islands: A whale of a time

These rocky islands are an unexpectedly delightful place to visit, says Camilla Swift

Charming: Skanderberg Square in Tirana

Notes on...

Albania

Seferis’s line about his native Greece, ‘Our country is a closed in place, all mountains’, haunted my mind as I…

The Week

Leading article

Soggy thinking

A fraction of the money we spend subsidising green energy could keep our homes truly safe from flooding

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home Thousands of houses were flooded in York, Leeds, Manchester and other parts of Lancashire and Yorkshire, after weeks of…

Diary

Diary

Also: my Muslim friends’ radicalisation worries; facts about Proust’s Paris; a Parisian dentist in London

Barometer

Barometer

Plus: 2015 in numbers; cities of terror and murder; the origins of the caucus

Ancient and modern

Plato and think-tanks

Plato’s Republic and Baroness Butler-Sloss’s think-tank report

From The Archives

Next year’s war

From ‘The Military Situation’, The Spectator, 1 January 1916: The opening of a new year is a time for taking stock…

Letters

Letters

Mind altering Sir: I was quite surprised to find the spread of mind altering drugs had reached Wandandian NSW but…

Columnists

Rod Liddle

The political wisdom of people who don’t even know what a circle is

Just because they might wish a shape to be a circle, that does not make it so

James Delingpole

The best things in the world spring up by accident

And almost everything bad is the result of utopians trying to plan the world into a better state

Books

Left to right: Wolcott Gibbs, Dorothy Parker and James Thurber.

Lead book review

A touch of class

There are plenty of good stories about the legendary New Yorker in its heyday, but sadly Thomas Vinciguerra is no storyteller

Books

Scratching a living

In The Prose Factory D.J. Taylor describes the precarious life of the English man of letters over the past century

Books

Family divisions

Pryce-Jones’s memoir, Fault Lines, depicts an unhappy, complex family riven by snobbishness and materialism

Velázquez’s portrait of his Moorish assistant Juan de Pareja. The glorious lace collar would surely have fallen foul of Spain’s sumptuary laws

Books

Lost, found and lost again

Laura Cumming, on the trail of a missing masterpiece, pours heart and soul into a thrilling detective story

Books

Telling tales

Mallory Ortberg hilariously imagines how some of the greatest fictional characters would have texted today

Books

A step too far

The brutal murder by the IRA of the courageous Grenadier Guards officer who took one risk too many is given the fullest treatment yet in Alistair Kerr’s Betrayal

Books

Agony and ecstasy in the garden

Robin Lane Fox has made an intense study of a critical decade in St Augustine’s life when he produced his most famous book — ‘like no other, before or since’

Illustration by beatrice forshall

Books

The rarest blend of white and gold

Horatio Clare travels far and wide in the hope of glimpsing the world’s rarest bird but finds only some eccentric birders attempting to do the same

Arts

'Lion Hunt', 1861, by Eugène Delacroix

Arts feature

Best in show

Martin Gayford recommends the exhibitions to visit - and to avoid - over the coming year

Map of the Island of Utopia, book frontispiece, 1563

Arts Essay

Lessons from Utopia

The 1516 classic - which is celebrating its 500th anniversary at Somerset House - is a textbook for our troubled times (once you get past the proto-socialist polemic)

Noma Dumezweni as Linda

Theatre

Passion play

Plus: a beautiful, elegant play at the Young Vic with a brutal denouement

Music

Murder, he wrote

The 16th century composer wrote some of the most alluring music ever written. But his psychopathic biography always overshadows this

Eddie Redmayne as Lili Elbe in ‘The Danish Girl’

Cinema

Bad manners

It looks nice but is dull, repetitive and lacking in insight — and I wanted to punch Eddie Redmayne

Radio

Aural wonderland

Ads aside, Radiolab’s podcast about American ice-cream wars had Kate Chisholm hooked - as did Radio 4’s Truth Be Told podcast about what it’s like to have a Caesarean

Television

Losing the plot

Plus: in Billionaire Boy, David Walliams seems to have learned that childish humour is at its winning best when it’s aimed at children

Jos van Immerseel

Culture Buff

Culture buff

It may be the best thing to come out of Belgium after chocolates. Or even the only good thing after…

Life

High life

High life

The time has come for governments to step in — and for me to say that something must be really wrong

Low life

Low life

It was one tablet after another — legal and illegal

Real life

Real life

2016 was to be the year of no more principled stands, but that was before I got wind of London’s first toilets for the socially excluded

Long life

Long life

His spirit of optimism is a powerful impetus to good cheer as a new year begins

Bridge

Bridge

This might be the most beautiful hand I’ve ever seen. I came across it while reading one of the old…

Chess

Banking on chess

As the new year begins, I pay a final tribute to the city financier Jim Slater, who did so much to…

Chess puzzle

Chess puzzle

Black to play. This position is from Wright-Keene, Slater Tournament, Southend 1968. Black’s next move destroyed the white kingside and…

Competition

No thanks

In Competition No. 2928 you were invited to submit a thank-you letter for a particularly unenjoyable Christmas visit to relatives…

Crossword

2241: Customary

The unclued lights, (two of two words), individually or as two pairs, are of a kind, verifiable in Brewer 19th…

Crossword solution

To 2239: ITOIX

The unclued lights include the words ONE to NINE which had to be entered as figures 1 to 9 in…

Status anxiety

The plot to save our allotments

My dream of growing veg around the corner is fading, but there’s a fight still on

The Wiki Man

Things we don’t mind paying for

Take parking in central London. I wouldn’t do it more than once or twice a year

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Also: a new way to communicate with the hard of hearing

Drink

Commanding vintages

Three fine memories discussed over even finer wines

Mind your language

Quotations

Misattribution is more common – and sometimes riskier – than you might think