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The Spectator

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Mandatory vindication

They were the three words of the week, if not of the year: ‘vaccine’, ‘mandates’ and ‘unlawful’. That was the…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

Guess what! The Liberal party in Victoria and its leader John Pesutto have actually shown some backbone, principle and commitment…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Faculty, gaggle or murder

What’s the best collective noun for academics?

Features Australia

Land of the Unfree

US elites are at war with their citizens

Features Australia

‘Pretty close to evil’

Tony Abbott slams conservative fascination with Putin

Features Australia

Tay-tay & the theory of relativity

Let’s do the Turnbull-Morrison time warp

Features

Features

Permanent stalemate in Gaza suits Netanyahu

Jerusalem After midnight on Thursday is dead-time for the Israeli media. The weekend editions have gone to print (newspapers don’t…

Features

Why Latvia is expelling its Russian speakers

Riga, Latvia At the age of 74, Inessa Novikova, who is ethnically Russian, was told she had to learn Latvian…

Features

Please stop clapping at funerals

The Happy Clappies – evangelical Christians who clap along to worship songs during church services – have been around since…

Books

More from Books

The hellraisers of Hoxton: Art, by Peter Carty, reviewed

The pretensions of the Young British Artists are lampooned in Carty’s debut novel – but there’s still something irresistible about the 1990s London it recreates

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A war reporter bravely faces death – but not from sniper fire

As a foreign correspondent for the New York Times, Rod Nordland learned to expect many dangers, but a brain tumour wasn’t one of them

More from Books

A free spirit: Clairmont, by Lesley McDowell, reviewed

Even by the Villa Diodati’s standards, Claire Clairmont was unconventional, seducing Byron when she was 18, and giving birth to their child after a possible affair with Shelley

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All work and no play is dulling our senses

Ancient Greek philosophers reckoned that life was all about free time, but 16th-century puritanism dealt a blow to the old festive culture from which we’ve never fully recovered

More from Books

What became of Thomas Becket’s bones?

Alice Roberts’s examinations of violent deaths in the past take her to the site of Becket’s murder in Canterbury cathedral and the later destruction of his shrine by Henry VIII

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Longing for oblivion: The Warm Hands of Ghosts, by Katherine Arden, reviewed

Arden’s novel spares us no details of trench warfare on the Western Front and the severely traumatised men dreaming of escape into amnesia

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An Oxford spy ring is finally uncovered

Charles Beaumont’s warped group, recruited by an eccentric fellow of Jesus College, seems all too plausible. Other thrillers from Celia Walden and Matthew Blake

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The remarkable Princess Gulbadan, flower of the Mughal court

Emperor Babur’s beloved daughter – whose name means ‘body like a rose’ – speaks to us across the centuries in a cliffhanging account of royal life in Hindustan

More from Books

Do we really want to bring back the wolf?

The apex predator is making a startling resurgence in Europe – many say to the enrichment of the landscape. But it’ll take a lot to convince the British of that

Lead book review

Four months adrift in the Pacific: a couple’s extraordinary feat of endurance

When a freak occurrence wrecked the Baileys’ sloop 300 miles from the Galapagos, their chances of rescue were minimal – and one of them couldn’t even swim