CHOOSE A PREVIOUS ISSUE FROM THE LIST
23 January 2016 Aus
‘The Donald’ is winning because he is angrier than his rivals
Australian Columnists
Brown Study
Neil Brown
As our Prime Minister has observed many times, there has never been a better time to be alive, what with…
Diary Australia
Matthew Gibbs
‘We have really everything in common with America nowadays except, of course, language.’ As ever, Oscar Wilde was right. Block…
Columnists
World Politics
James Forsyth
His refugee policy has been both humane and politically sustainable. Angela Merkel’s has been neither
The Spectator's Notes
Charles Moore
Plus: the late Bishop Bell of Chichester; Airey Neave; the IRA; China; and the problematic case of Tesco wine
Rod Liddle
Rod Liddle
But then all the best actors are ignored, regardless of race. The Academy Awards committee prefers third-rate ones
Matthew Parris
Matthew Parris
It should be allowed to remain — but opposite it should be erected a new statue of Lobengula, the great Matabele leader
Hugo Rifkind
Hugo Rifkind
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is so far out of the political mainstream he needs a whole new dictionary of terms
Any other business
Martin Vander Weyer
He’s the only one of a Dad’s Army of pundits no longer on hand to commentate on the looming financial crisis
Books
Lead book review
Jonathan Steinberg
The vast, sprawling entity, generally considered a byword for inefficiency, actually worked remarkably well, according to Peter H. Wilson
Books
Caroline Moore
Julian Barnes’s latest novel, The Noise of Time, is a brilliant portrait of an artist trying not to sign away his soul
Books
Mark Cocker
If you read one nature book this year, make it Sooyong Park’s account of wildlife hell among the most beautiful — and persecuted — animals on earth
Books
Andrew Lycett
Alive, Alive Oh!, Athill’s latest manifesto for living life to the full, could not be bettered
Books
Horatio Clare
Amy Liptrot’s frank memoir of dipsomania, and drying out, in the remotest of the Orkneys makes for addictive reading
Books
Josephine Livingstone
Molly Crabapple’s account of misogyny and exploitation in the American art world is a valuable political document, strikingly illustrated
Books
Mark Mason
Emily Chappell’s vivid memoir, What Goes Around, is a welcome new take on London from a cycle courier’s perspective
Books
Ysenda Maxtone Graham
Ysenda Maxtone Graham finds Irving’s latest novel, Avenue of Mysteries — largely concerned with the Catholic church — one holy mess
Books
Anna Aslanyan
Gorky’s The Mother, hailed as a paean to socialist ideals when first published, is surprisingly topical a century later
Australian Books
Terry Barnes
In Australia there are tens of thousands of emotionally stable, financially secure but medically infertile people. As much as they…
Arts
Arts feature
Martin Gayford
His frigid self-control concealed an emotional volcano, says Martin Gayford
Arts feature
Stephen Smith
Reputedly the highest paid screenwriter in the business, Davies is unrepentant about the gratuitous rumpy-pumpy in his adaptions of the classics
Cinema
Deborah Ross
A film about the financial crash that sounds boring on paper but that will fill you with righteous anger
Theatre
Lloyd Evans
Plus: a monumental feat of memory and performance by a sensational talent at the Southwark Playhouse
Dance
Ismene Brown
And their Latin dancers are showing us Brits that, in classical ballet, technical dazzle isn’t vulgar - it’s vital
Music
Damian Thompson
And was Gustavo Dudamel happy with Barenboim’s Morton Feldman speeds in the Brahms? It certainly saved Barenboim from playing too many wrong notes
Radio
Kate Chisholm
Plus: Radio Five Live goes inside one of the largest hospitals in the UK, Queen Elizabeth in Birmingham
Television
James Delingpole
It makes Channel 4's Deutschland 83 a seductive Sunday night rival to BBC's War and Peace
Culture Buff
Donald McDonald
There’s never been a better time to be… in Canberra. Parliament isn’t sitting, there’s decent accommodation at reasonable rates; best…
Life
High life
Taki
Last time we met, as I wielded my crow bar, she jumped into a taxi and fled the scene
Low life
Jeremy Clarke
I thought our former PM was just a gentle cricket lover but it turns out that he’s a Master of the Universe
Real life
Melissa Kite
Forget the cultural sights — just give me a club soda and five days by the pool
Long life
Alexander Chancellor
Don’t give up the fags and the booze: longevity for its own sake is the least worthy of human aspirations
The turf
Robin Oakley
Without the little tracks such as Warwick the racing world would be lost
Bridge
Janet de Botton
The New Year got off to a great start with TGR’s annual auction pairs, the best run tournament I have…
Chess
Raymond Keene
Paul Keres, the Estonian grandmaster and many times world championship contender, was born a hundred years ago this month. His…
Chess puzzle
Raymond Keene
White to play. This position is from Keres-Spassky, Gothenburg 1955. Can you spot White’s crushing blow? Answers to me at…
Competition
Lucy Vickery
In Competition No. 2931 you were invited to submit a psychiatric report on a well-known figure in literature. Shakespearean characters…
Crossword
Doc
The unclued lights, one of two words, are of a kind, verifiable in Brewer. Across 1 After…
Crossword solution
Doc
The unclued lights (1A, 1D, 6A/33, 13, 18, 32 and 38/24) are seven of the ‘Twelve Curious CUSTOMS Worth Reviving’,…
Status anxiety
Toby Young
It’s beginning to look as though the Labour leader really does sympathise with terrorists
Spectator sport
Roger Alton
League Two giant killers are in the running for three titles... and their stadium has no fourth stand
Dear Mary
Mary Killen
Plus: A party co-host worries that her hospitality will go unnoticed
Food
Tanya Gold
It’s always done the best salt beef in central London, but post-renovation the place just isn’t the same
Mind your language
Dot Wordsworth
It’s not going to be replaced with the boxed set, so you might as well stop seething
Australian Wine Club
Ben Canaider
Goodness. Gracious. Me. I had a lurking suspicion that Spectator Australia readers enjoyed a glass of wine, but judging by…