The Spectator
Australia
Labor’s penance
And so the sins of the forefathers shall be visited upon the sons, or so it must feel like to…
Australian Columnists
Australian Notes
Good to see the names of another 11 writers added to the Circular Quay Writers’ Walk in Sydney. But can…
Brown study
What an eerie coincidence there was last week between Tony Abbott’s visit to Afghanistan, the virtual end of the war…
Diary
It’s 1.45 a.m. and I can’t sleep: jet lag. We returned early yesterday morning from the UK — my first…
Australian Features
A forgotten hero
Spare a thought for the real brains behind the Sydney Opera House
Put the expenses ‘scandal’ in perspective
Our politicians are not ripping off taxpayers anywhere near as much as the news media suggest
Good night, sweet prince
Hamlet Belvoir, Sydney, until 1 December While the actual Prince of Denmark was charming Sydney crowds during his visit to…
Features
Rural revolt
Abandoned by trendy urban Tories, the shires are in revolt — and heading for UKIP
Sandhurst in the sand
If 'Sandhurst in the Sand' succeeds, it could be a revolutionary development
They still don’t get it
The government's solutions will fail because it can't grasp the scale of the problem, says our NHS whistleblower
The fight for our lives
If the Assisted Dying Bill goes through, will you one day feel pressured to hasten your own death?
The age of the Yuffies
So you're overeducated and underemployed — welcome to the world of the young urban failure
Investment: Bargains for bravehearts
Whether it's Yes or No, there will be changes to taxes and land reform — so invest accordingly
Investment: Power failures
Energy used to be a super-safe sector — but political interference has changed all that
Investment: A plague on our houses
They're actually wealth taxes, and wealth taxes are the last resort of a cash-strapped economy
Notes on … Christmas shopping in Bruges
Most Belgians of my acquaintance tend to be rather disparaging about Bruges. It’s a theme park, they say, a Flemish…
The Week
High-speed fail
By clinging on to costly HS2, the Tories are allowing Labour to look like the prudent party
Portrait of the week
Home A storm passed over England, with plenty of warning. The strongest gust, of 99mph, was recorded at Needles Old…
Art history
The ancient Greeks would have been appalled at the reverence accorded to potters like Perry
Columnists
The next election will break all the rules
In an era of coalitions and four-party politics — and with the left more united than the right — all bets are off
The Spectator’s Notes
Plus: Prince Charles and Paul Dacre have the same birthday — but Dacre is more likely to abdicate
It’s a tough life when you wear a burka. Believe me, I know
People look at you differently — just as they would if you turned up at the Guardian with pink cords and tweeds
The human condition in a scuffed yellow line
Why do we all wear down the same path across a park?
Arise, Sir Jim: Grangemouth’s offshore billionaire is an industrial hero
Plus: Tea for Spectator readers on a yacht (hopefully)
The thrill of the bore draw
Why not bet on boredom? Most sports fans assume a game will be more thrilling than it turns out to be
Books
Beating Boney
Two new books show that, from Wellington to dockyard workers, everyone was engaged in the long war effort
Garden of earthly delights
Vic Gatrell's The First Bohemians is a chaotic work — but it's good on coffee
The imitable Jeeves
Is it really marriage for Bertie? Sebastian Faulks is bang on-message with his PG Wodehouse homage Jeeves and the Wedding Bells
Dancing to a different tune
Pig's Foot conjures up the salt-eaten arcades and collapsing promenades of Havana
Melbourne’s academic ‘Potemkin Village’
While reading this book I was reminded of the great ‘scandal’ among New York’s intelligentsia in 1982 when the then…
Arts
Darkness visible
This Halloween, scare yourself witless with the BFI's feast of Gothic cinema
Conduct becoming
Youthful conductor Daniel Harding realises the older he gets, the more he has to learn
Singing under cardboard
It's not totally sound-proof, but Christchurch's 'temporary' church will stand the test of time
Let’s hear it for the toffs
At last — an exuberant satire that challenges the values of the Islington patisserie queue
Kissing away kingship
His thoroughly modern king may appeal to younger folk, but is a betrayal of Shakespeare's complexity
Feats of Klee
The artist can be too perfect and precious — and Tate Modern isn't convincing me otherwise
Disturbed by Britten
Plus: How the end of Opera North's 'Death in Venice' plays like Mann's last sentence
Mother courage
Philomena is based on the true story of an Irish woman searching for the son stolen from her by the…
Machines and us
Polly Toynbee and A.L. Kennedy say we're living like automatons, unpaid automatons
Tales of the unexpected
Plus: If the term Red Wedding means nothing to you yet, DO NOT READ the end of this piece
Songs of love and hate
The rocker whipped up a hurricane of his own at the Hammersmith Apollo
Life
Tendonitis
Magnus Carlsen has risen to achieve the highest ever chess rating. He ascended to 2872 on the rankings, which compares…
No. 290
White to play. This position is a variation from Carlsen-Anand, Monaco 2011. White is a piece down here but has…
Georgic
In Competition 2821 you were invited to supply a poem that provides instruction or useful information. This challenge was, of…
2137: Speculation
Each of two associated words is suggested by four unclued lights (one of two words). Elsewhere, ignore an accent. …
To 2134: Mere letters
The pairs of anagrams were of countries and their capitals: Dominica & Roseau (2 & 11); Latvia & Riga (20…
Waiting for Waitrose
I was surrounded by naked women when the issue of planning permission gripped me
The best of times, the worst of times
The comic book Asterix in Switzerland is full of joys, not least the many jokes about Swiss obsessions with tidiness…
Heston’s brown Dinner
Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, a brown cavern in the Mandarin Oriental hotel, Knightsbridge, has won a second Michelin star. These…
Pull & Bear
The Spanish think it means something to the British, and vice versa. It means nothing

































































