Men behaving badly
Jamie Lloyd’s production of Pinter’s The Homecoming is a pile of terrific and silly ideas. Mostly terrific. The action takes…
Men behaving badly
Jamie Lloyd’s production of Pinter’s The Homecoming is a pile of terrific and silly ideas. Mostly terrific. The action takes…
There will be blood
It was a stroke of genius to invite Glenda Jackson to make her return to acting as the star of…
There will be blood
It was a stroke of genius to invite Glenda Jackson to make her return to acting as the star of…
Bequest
Knowing he was ill he offered a free choice of the books on his shelves, but for every one wanted…
Heron
Walking to the bus stop after a hospital visit, in an unfamiliar, dusty suburb, I pass a small park on…
Bridge
If you don’t play bridge, you really should avoid gatherings of bridge players — you’ll find us excruciatingly dull. I’ve…
Mission Innovation
A warm, fuzzy pat on the back for Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who went to Paris and – thus far…
After the Black Friday flop, shops can get back to what they do best
The high street flopperoo that was ‘Black Friday’ may have something to do with terrorism fears, or even the downturn…
A different species of argument
Because I used to go to venues like Bataclan an awful lot myself, I’ve been dwelling a great deal on…
After Labour’s Syria shambles, step forward Major Dan
Listen http://rss.acast.com/viewfrom22/thegreendelusion/media.mp3 It makes no sense for Britain to bomb Islamic State in Iraq but not Syria. Attacking a group…
The Spectator’s Notes
Speaking on the Today programme on Monday, Sir David Attenborough, who wants a global agreement to control carbon emissions, pointed…
Beyond a joke
Let’s start this week with a joke: ‘You know Mrs Kelly? Do you know Mrs Kelly? Her husband’s that little…
Australian diary
It is not often that I feel sorry for a politician however Bill Leak’s portrait of Bill Shorten as a…
Fat-shaming works. Why else would I heave myself up and down hills for hours every day?
We have been contemplating moving to the North, for a variety of unassailable reasons. One is the chance to gloat…
The four men who averted the Apocalypse
Reagan, Schultz, Gorbachev and Shevardnadze are the giants bestriding Robert Service’s magisterial account of the end of the Cold War
The bicycle may have triumphed but it’s far from perfect
There are some wonderful bikes on show in Cycle Revolution at the Design Museum but there’s too much slavish adoration too
It is political correctness, not maniacal bigots, that will end civilisation
The liberal media are more concerned about the reaction to the ruthlessness of Isis than about the ruthlessness itself
The pretend war: bombing Isil won’t solve the problem
The deployment of our military might in Syria will exacerbate regional disorder – and it will solve nothing
The spending cuts Osborne flatly refused to make
Sajid Javid and Liz Truss proposed reductions at Business and Environment that were knocked back by the Treasury
The ringfence cycle
By now, George Osborne had hoped to have completed his austerity programme. Instead, he finds himself making what is, still,…
Erica Jong’s middle-aged dread
Erica Jong’s entertaining Fear of Dying focuses on the fearsome juggling act of being a daughter, parent and grandparent at 60
Artistic taste is inversely proportional to political nous
It’s possibly why Tate Britain’s Artist & Empire exhibition is so thin — and why the Queen’s Gallery display of Dutch masters is so rich
The GP charged around to my side of the table and roved her hand all over my pubic area
Later that afternoon, armed with a wide-mouthed empty plastic bottle, I went to see Mary Magdalene’s skull





