PREVIOUS ISSUES

CHOOSE A PREVIOUS ISSUE FROM THE LIST    


THIS WEEK'S ISSUE

The Spectator

4 October 2014 Aus

Selfie obsession

People can’t seem to stop taking pictures of themselves – and their private parts. It’s the ultimate expression of our increasingly puerile and narcissistic society

Sign up to The Spectator Australia newsletter

Australia's best political analysis - straight to your inbox

Australia

Leading article Australia

We are all Israelis now

‘ISIS and Hamas are branches of the same poisonous tree,’ asserted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week in a…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown Study

I regret to say that this will be my last column, at least in this regular form. I am afraid…

Diary Australia

Diary Australia

Riding to work just seems obvious from this range: an easy 15 minutes from Fitzroy to the Southbank home of…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Childcare – the new frontier in the culture wars

Increasingly, institutionalised childcare is being used to promote green and progressive agendas

Bottom Drawer

Bottom Drawer

My clairvoyant connection with Julia Gillard

Features Australia

But would you have a beer with them?

Forget KPI’s and opinion polls - the only measure of a pollie is their Beer-factor

Features Australia

Sheikh Google

Islamic terrorism has found the perfect way to creep into our teenagers’ bedrooms

Bottom Drawer

Bottom Drawer

My clairvoyant connection with Julia Gillard

Features

Features

Selfie obsession

Brooks Newmark, revenge porn, and a heady brew of hypocrisy and narcissism

Notebook

A letter from the border

While the Commons voted to bomb, we were getting over the razor wire

Features

Conversion experience

Ask yourself how you would feel if your child started spouting hate-filled bile against homosexuals, women, Jews — anyone, in fact, who wasn’t a Muslim man

Features

Hong Kong vs China

The island and the mainland are drifting further apart. But it may be Hong Kong that represents the true, rebellious spirit of China

Features

The shadow of the tanks

I can't look at Hong Kong without thinking about how far the Chinese Communist Party will go – and how little we'll do to stop them

Features

Faith, sin and divorce

Accept liberal arguments for the convenience of people like me, and you threaten the foundations of the Church

Features

A long goodbye

Poetry, civilisation and the critical benefits of facing leukaemia

Features

Whose side are they on?

We’ve let the desert state face both ways on funding extremism

A police horse guards Buckingham Palace, 1937

Notes on...

Horses in London

The city of the horse and carriage is gone. But some traces remain...

The Week

Leading article

Think again, Mrs May

Theresa May's proposals go against our tradition of free speech, and set a dangerous precedent

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home The Commons, having been specially recalled, passed, by 524 votes to 43, a motion supporting ‘the use of UK…

Diary

Diary

Plus: A precious new friend, a great literary festival, and a reason to memorise a speech

Barometer

Barometer

...200 years ago. Plus: Who sexts, the deadliest borders, and why weather records always seem to be getting broken

From The Archives

From the archives

From ‘Voluntary and compulsory service’, The Spectator, 3 October 1914: We do not suggest that the voluntary principle should be…

Letters

Letters

Degrees of ability Sir: Nick Cohen has written an amusing piece on PPE (‘Crash course’, 27 September), marred by lazy journalism.…

Columnists

World Politics

Why are the Tories so happy?

A surprisingly chipper party conference, and what comes after it

Matthew Parris

A third way to war

I don't agree with Jesse Norman's arguments about the Commons and the military. But the question he raises deserves more than a pat, pious response

Any other business

Will Osborne’s tilt against Double Dutch tax dodgers play into Farage’s hands?

Plus: Northern Rock’s charitable legacy in danger; and the news from Hong Kong

Books

What, in the end, was it all for? In a French caricature of 1814, Napoleon precariously spans Madrid and Moscow and begins to topple. Fontainebleau — scene of his abdication — is depicted centre-stage

Lead book review

The Grand Disturber

A review of Napoleon the Great, by Andrew Roberts. The immense collateral damage of Napoleon’s imperial ambition never gets the attention it deserves in Roberts’s biography

Books

Derring dos and don’ts

A review of Abducting a General, by Patrick Leigh Fermor, and Kidnap in Crete, by Rick Stroud. An exhilarating account of Paddy’s hair-raising kidnapping of a Nazi general that was ultimately of dubious strategic value

Corin Redgrave, playing the contrarian William Roper, husband of Thomas More’s favourite child, Margaret, in A Man for All Seasons

Books

A memoir of love and loss

A review of Our Time of Day: My Life with Corin Redgrave, by Kika Markham. An autobiography stamped by an unflinching and humane candour

Books

Under cover in the underworld

A review of The Soul of Discretion, by Susan Hill. There is little pure detection in the latest in Hill’s Serraillier series; the focus lies elsewhere

Books

Finding a new way to live

A review of Nora Webster, by Colm Toibin. Anyone who expects a novel about a bereaved wife with four small kids to emote wildly has obviously never read any Toibin before

‘Conversation Piece’, 1997, by Andrew Festing, Marylebone Cricket Club, featuring: Geoffrey Boycott (Yorkshire), A.P.E. Knott and D.L. Underwood (Kent); middle row, F.J. Titmus (Middlesex), R. Illingworth (Yorkshire and Leicestershire), D.L. Amiss and M.J.K. Smith (Warwickshire), front row, J.H. Edrich (Surrey) and D.B. Close (Yorkshire and Somerset); the first conversation piece is in the background

Books

The greatest living Yorkshireman

A review of The Corridor of Certainty: My Life beyond Cricket, by Geoffrey Boycott. An egotistical look at the life and times of the greatest living Yorkshireman

Signs of the times: the shrivelled leaves and lesion on the trunk of infected ash trees

Books

Ashes to ashes

A review of The Ash Tree, by Oliver Rackham. A certain understandable I-told-you-so huffiness drives this analysis of the death of one of our prettiest common trees

Books

Perils of a charmed life

A review of Travelling to Work: Diaries, 1988-98, by Michael Palin. He leads a charmed life that I wouldn’t wish upon anybody

Books

Practically perfect in every way

A review of Lila, by Marilynne Robinson. A book that makes you feel newly in love with the world

Books

Dirty dealing

A review of Talking to Terrorists: How to End Armed Conflicts, by Jonathan Powell. He makes much of Blair’s success in Northern Ireland – but not all disputes are so soluble

All too briefly together: Esmond and Jessica working behind a bar in Miami in 1940

Books

Kissing cousins

A review of Churchill’s Rebels: Esmond Romilly and Jessica Mitford, by Meredith Whitford. Esmond’s bravery and Jessica’s wit make them riveting subjects

Paul Rosenberg with a Matisse painting in the 1930s

Books

A series of impressionist strokes

A review of My Grandfather’s Gallery, by Anne Sinclair. A portrait of an exceptional moment in French art – and its tragic unravelling

Books

Make or break

A review of Us, by David Nicholls. The novel’s comedy is the secret of its success

Australian Books

Racy reading

In a field which is often characterised by polemics and hand-wringing, Noel Pearson has emerged as both a considered thinker…

Arts

Space odyssey: Ed White walking in space over New Mexico, Gemini 4, June 1965 Image: James McDivitt

Arts feature

Cosmic sublime

Mark Mason on an exhibition of NASA photographs that makes you forget to breathe

Arts feature

Follow the lieder

Just how much fun is it listening to all 650 of Schubert's songs?

‘Water-meadows near Salisbury’, 1829/30, by John Constable

Exhibitions

Small wonder

The small works - the studies of foliage and sketches of landscapes - are the chief value of the exhibition

Alice Coote and Sarah Tynan in ‘Xerxes’ at ENO

Opera

Revival MOT

Plus: Bored to near-hysteria by ENO's Xerxes, Michael Tanner finds it hard to imagine what it must be like to be a Handelian

Theatre

The Tim and Andy show

Plus: a masterclass in dramatic writing from David Hare in The Vertical Hour - if you ignore the predictable politics

Cinema

Playing it for laughs

That said, Ben Affleck's performance is more subtle than his all-American jaw might suggest

Consummately psychotic: Mark E. Smith of The Fall

Music

Psycho thriller

Digby Warde-Aldam is won over by a consummately psychotic Mark E. Smith at the Electric Brixton

Music

Class of ’73

Conductors like John Eliot Gardiner proved more durable simply by not sticking their necks out

Dance

Tarts and Tchaikovsky

Plus: Mats Ek's Juliet and Romeo at Sadler's Wells reveals the Swede is a piercing portraitist of women

Television

Murder in the mall

James Delingpole on BBC2's Terror at the Mall, one of the most gripping and important pieces of TV any of us are likely to see this year

Culture Buff

Culture Buff

He was born into Australian ballet aristocracy but now lives in Houston. Stanton Welch is the son of Marilyn Jones…

Life

High life

High life

The pain — and pleasure — of life up high

Low life

Low life

And chasing up the ghosts of Hemingway, Malcolm Lowry, Virginia Woolf and Jack Kerouac

Real life

Real life

But then the solicitor’s letter arrived...

Long life

Long life

I have high hopes for him — the time is ripe for a new approach to the political interview

The turf

Bronze Angel delight

The stars of Newmarket’s sunny Cambridgeshire

Bridge

Bridge

I don’t know about the only gay in the village but I am starting to feel like the last woman…

Chess

Highland fling

Recently Professor Jackie Eales gave a lecture in Canterbury on ‘Queenship in the Age of the Enraged Chess Queen’. (The…

Chess puzzle

No. 334

White to play. This position is from Keene-Nunn, Surrey Junior Championship 1963. This game started with the Scotch Game opening.…

Competition

And another thing

In Competition No. 2867 you were invited to add a final stanza to a well-known poem. Nicholas Stone imagined how…

Crossword

2182: Tops

The unclued lights are of a kind, verifiable in Brewer.   Across   1    Poet has overdose first (5)…

Crossword solution

To 2179: Cos

The unclued lights are abbreviations of seven English and one Welsh county, which themselves are inflected headwords in Chambers. (Consequently,…

Status anxiety

Nigel Farage’s class war

He's not motivated by winning. He's trying to mess with David Cameron's head

Spectator sport

Enjoying the Ryder

What's wrong with a quiet round followed by a modest handshake and a gin and tonic?

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Plus: Dealing with rude old acquaintances, and the tactful way to turn down a giant plateful

Food

Disney matter

The food is unmagical; it is quite close to extortion

Mind your language

Mark Reckless

If he’s lucky, by having a carefree ancestor, rather than a careless one