The Spectator
20 September 2014 Aus
Australia
Burkean activism
‘For those who are political advocates within Palestine itself, I will never know the bravery that comes with putting your…
Australian Columnists
Scotland always was a foreign country
It’s tempting to look for parallels between the Scottish independence vote and our own republican referendum.
Brown Study
Troy Bramston (‘Gorton vs McMahon: the secret memo’ 30 August) joins a long line of journalists who keep repeating the…
Australian Features
Islamist barbarity can have widespread appeal
For some, democracy unleashes illiberal and totalitarian forces
Time to cull this plague of dunces
The proposed university changes will discourage many students from signing up. Good.
Features
To catch a killer
Politicians’ promises to bring those who murder British hostages to justice almost never come true
A slap in the Facebook
I love my Facebook friends. They make me feel young again. But the fighting is preposterous
Anglican disunion
The Anglican Mission in England looks like a support group. But if required, it could turn into rather more than that
‘I don’t see the wisdom there once was’
The former US Secretary of State, now 91, on statesmanship from Richelieu to Obama
Deal
It's not as rough as it was in Daniel Defoe's day, but it remains a town for people who won't be told what to do
The Week
The age of rage
Across Europe, populist anti-politics has gone from being a novelty to knocking on the doors of power
Portrait of the week
Home People living in Scotland voted in a referendum that asked: ‘Should Scotland be an independent country?’ A great deal…
Forewarned is forearmed
They'd like that he doesn't admit to having one. Apart from that, however...
From the archives
From ‘A review of the war’, The Spectator, 19 September 1914: It is the duty of all English publicists to make…
Columnists
It’s hard to refute stereotypes about British people being a bit disgusting
We drink, fight and shag too much. Not all of us, but enough for a Portuguese bestseller
I’ll never feel the same about the Scots
Most English people I know wanted Scotland to stay, but only if the Scots themselves really want to
The ‘no’ campaign’s problem was that it sounded like me
Were all Scotland’s credible populist figures in favour of independence? Or were the rest just scared to speak out?
Botín’s not-so-dark secret of banking success: simple rules, smart technology and team spirit
Plus: Oil prices and other Scottish questions
Books
A Blanche Dubois of a book
Thomas W. Hodgkinson says John Lahr’s ‘standalone’ new account of the life of the playwright, ‘Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh’, would be better if it didn't have to stand alone
An old classic in a new light
A review of ‘Crime and Punishment’, by Fyodor Dostoevsky, translated by Oliver Ready. It sheds new light on an old classic
Shades of the classroom
A review of ‘Civil War’, by Peter Ackroyd. There is a fascination in watching the construction of a narrative that accommodates so little analysis
Homage to Simenon
Patrick Marnham praises Penguin Classics for republishing the Maigret novels
Shaping divinity to our ends
A review of ‘Fields of Blood: Religion and the History of Violence’, by Karen Armstrong. The former nun makes a convincing case that religions are corrupted by success
Not a foot wrong
A review of ‘I Knew the Bride’, by Hugo Williams. A marvellous, memorious collection drawn to the second world war and family heartache
England’s golden boy
A review of ‘Bobby Moore: The Man in Full’, by Matt Dickinson. Moore was born to be England captain
Poems from Going for a Song
An Anthology of Poems about Antiques, compiled and introduced by Bevis Hillier
The bitter Snows of yesteryear
A review of ‘Pamela Hansford Johnson: Her Life, Works and Times’, by Wendy Pollard, which takes this spiky novelist – and her dreadful husband, C.P. Snow – at their own inflated valuation
An intellectual in intelligence
A review of ‘The Secret World’, by Hugh Trevor-Roper. The future Lord Dacre's early work for MI6 shaped the rest of his life
All dressed up – and skirting the subject
A review of ‘Playing to the Gallery: Helping Contemporary Art in its Struggle to be Understood’, by Grayson Perry. Perry’s Reith Lectures asked pertinent questions but didn’t bother with serious answers
Ack-ack guns on the Heath
A review of ‘Slideshow: Memories of a Wartime Childhood’, by Marjorie Ann Watts. It’s at its best when channelling the voice and mind of a child
Talking pictures
A review of ‘Cecil Beaton: Portraits and Profiles’, edited by Hugo Vickers. Katherine Hepburn had ‘rocking horse nostrils’; Mae West was a ‘nice little ape’. The photographer was a natural writer – and snob
Marred entertainment
A review of ‘Head of State’, by Andrew Marr. Fantastical, cumbersome and unentertaining, Marr’s debut suggests he should definitely stick to his day job
Our most popular (and hardworking) living artist
A review of ‘Hockney: The Biography, Volume II’, by Christopher Simon Sykes. He’s got grumpier with old age, but still Hockney retains his youthful curiosity and energy
Keep the Booker British
Matthew Walther believes his fellow Americans should be excluded from our famous prize – for the sake of British ‘identity’
Arts
Master of alchemy
Martin Gayford talks to a surprisingly jolly Kiefer in advance of a major new Royal Academy retrospective
A Cubist in New York
Plus: new shows of work by Derek Hyatt, Anthony Caro, George Kennethson and Eileen Agar
Bad bad acting
Plus: a new play set in south Wales that overuses Alan Bennett’s trick of forcing laughs by getting senior characters to swear
Douchebags and dartboards
The Royal Opera House made the bigger splash with their opener but the ENO threw the best party - by far
Watch that man
This surreal biopic of the punkish Australian musician is domestic life as Kubrick would have shot it
Fashion victim
James Delingpole on the evidence that he hasn’t totally lost his fashion edge
Culture Buff
It’s chamber orchestras at 20 paces. Both the Australian Chamber Orchestra and the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra have recently announced their…
Life
Double trouble
The importance of pawn structure cannot be overestimated when planning chess strategy. Although Philidor (18th century) understood the importance of…
No. 332
White to play. This position is from Nimzowitsch-Rubinstein, Berlin 1928. White’s passed pawn and active pieces guarantee a winning advantage.…
Selfie
In Competition No. 2865 you were invited to compose a poet’s elegy for him or herself. This challenge took you…
2180: Superfluous
Each of nine clues contains a superfluous word. Initial letters of these words spell a word which can be read…
To 2177: Amaze
Songs by KATE BUSH include WUTHERING HEIGHTS, HAMMER HORROR, HOUNDS OF LOVE and CLOUDBUSTING in the perimeter, and (defined by…
Caught in Alex Salmond’s tractor beam
The SNP leader's magnetism could almost convert me to his cause
They don’t make footballers like Roy Race any more
The Melchester Rovers star has plenty to put in his memoir
My little plutocrat
It’s the next logical step in the redevelopment of London as a playpen for plutocratic families




































































