The Spectator
Australia
Two worlds colliding
The imagery was faintly disturbing. A powerful whitefella sits in the middle of a group of Aboriginal elders, themselves surrounded…
Diary Australia
At the season launch for the 1987 Sheffield Shield, the South Australian captain, David Hookes, was seated next to Don…
Australian Features
A dark day for Australia
Tony Abbott’s ‘leadership call’ on Section 18C is a double-whammy wallop in the face of liberty
It’s time to stop funding ‘elite’ sports
Australia’s performance at the Commonwealth Games has exposed what a waste of taxpayers’ money it all is
Betraying Israel for the Muslim vote
Bob Carr and Labor have abandoned a critical ally
Features
Boris jumps in
Can the Friends of Boris take down the Friends of George? Don't bet against them
Nearly there, Darling
The Scottish referendum battle still has six weeks to run. But right now there's no doubt who's ahead
Where have all the leaders gone?
The only countries willing to pay the price of leadership are ones we'd really rather didn't have it
Don’t blame the blob
As chairman of the National Trust, I’m part of the collection of green groups the former Environment Secretary blames for his sacking. He’s wrong
The Week
Portrait of the week
Home The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge joined 50 heads of state at the St Symphorien cemetery near Mons to…
Bread, circuses and Hamas
What responsibility do Gaza's rulers feel for its people? Very little, it seems
Columnists
The Spectator’s Notes
Plus: An undervalued curator, the death of Margaret Thatcher’s first boyfriend, and the secrets buried in email spam
Tread carefully: your garden’s saturated with race
A sociologist who makes Malcolm Bradbury’s History Man look balanced
I found my inner fascist in a letterbox
If you want to bring out my statist side, give your house a name and make it hard to post a leaflet through your door
Why don’t any of my friends own holiday homes?
It will soon seem as strange that the middle classes owned empty villas and cottages as it does that they used to have domestic staff living in the attic
A challenge for Centrica’s new boss: persuade the public we need to get fracking
Plus: The French catastrophe, One North and your bankers’ oaths
Books
Disciplined exoticism
A review of Goldeneye: Where Bond was Born, by Matthew Parker. This biography of Bond's creator reveals an Ian Fleming who was cruel, vain and racist
What the eye don’t see
A review of Invisible: The Dangerous Lure of the Unseen, by Philip Ball. Scientists and occultists held hands in their quest for the invisible
Soothing the savage breast
A review of H is for Hawk, by Helen Macdonald. It’s when describing the murderous, sulky, fractious birds themselves that this story comes alive
The Jane Austen of Brazil
A review of The Diary of ‘Helena Morley’, translated from the Portuguese by Elizabeth Bishop. A delightful, funny and revealing memoir of Brazilian teenage life in a 19th century mining town
Through the looking-glass
A review of Reynolds: Portraiture in Action, by Mark Hallett, an investigation of the strategies by which the painter achieved unprecedented fame
A ladies’ man in Moscow
A review of Twilight of the Eastern Gods, by Ismail Kadare. Women rescue this Virgilian tour through Khruschev’s Russia
Confessional box
A review of In Confidence: Talking Frankly About Fame, by Laurie Taylor. An artful distillation of over 60 long-form TV interviews, featuring everyone from Michael Frayn to Uri Geller
Guilt trip
If you had to pick one emotion to characterise Australia’s attitude towards East Timor, it would be guilt. We are…
Arts
Loose, wild and free
The acclaimed trumpeter discusses the discipline, terror and joy of jazz
Relative values
Brothers in Art is a welcome initiative, but it could have done with quite a few more careful loans
Monster in our midst
It's not a sunny film for a sunny day, but amid the cinematic desert of August it is at least masterfully told
Simple pleasures
The Soviet dance aesthetic now looks dated – unless you can pull it off as well as this
Bleak and brutal
If you were a mobster with a reputation to uphold, you'd go after Roberto Saviano too
Hearing aids
Radio 4 offers a course in developing the senses – if only the stars of Today in Parliament tuned in
Edinburgh rocks
Some performers think they're here for their big chance. Really, they're here to suffer
Life
It is glorious at Goodwood
It just needs to keep its sponsors under slightly better control
Two’s a crowd
The British Championship, which finished in Aberystwyth last week, has been shared by international master Jonathan Hawkins and the defending…
no. 326
White to play. This is from Perez Ponsa–Frick, Tromso Olympiad 2014. How did White blast through? Answers to me at…
Voter repellent
In Competition No. 2859 you were invited to submit an offputting party political broadcast by the Tories, Labour, the Lib…
2174: Difficulty
Five clues consist of cryptic indications of partial answers; in each case, the indicated part must be treated thematically to…
to 2171: 31 Across
The seven 2×2 squares each used the letters STAR in order, and depicted the seven major stars that make up…






























































