What do magpies want?
I am left feeling unnerved by the sudden presence of a bird wreathed in superstition and legend at my kitchen window.
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I am left feeling unnerved by the sudden presence of a bird wreathed in superstition and legend at my kitchen window.
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Orwell wrote Animal Farm at a time of global crisis as a warning about oppressive state power. Its message…
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When I was ten, Snow White got into a fight with my mother and hit her. We were at…
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The New Atheists hardened the idea that the two world-views are locked in opposition – but a new breed of scientists…
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The New Statesman’s medical columnist describes his experiences as a GP in the face of Covid-19, as a rumour…
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The British illustrator’s provocative, ink-splattered images – some of which, taken from a major new book, are published here –…
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Covid-19 has pricked the bubble of human supremacy and revealed our fragility. And the economic destruction means we cannot…
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My council flat became a source of shame – but the boy in this photograph knows nothing of that…
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Here she is, squatting down, head cocked, birdlike, to listen to a small girl.
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When I was four, my dad left because my mother had an affair with the milkman. I remember my…
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The godmother of rock’n’roll is my role model for middle age, old age and any age.
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Here is a picture of my grandmother, Grace, with the only child she gave birth to.
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No photo in my writing room is quite as poignant as this one of Bhutto, taken on 27 December…
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A new poem by the International Booker Prize winner, written in response to Curtis Parratt’s photo “Fall (5)”.
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Your eyes do not deceive: Elvis Presley buys lunch from a platform vendor.
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I was about five when this picture was taken, and already getting too big for my bird costume.
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Is it only because this is a photograph of my mother that I feel protective of it?
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The musician on being misunderstood, playing ping pong and why her songs aren’t about her.
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I’ve had a copy of this photo of Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon on my desk for years. When…
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A refugee displaced by the First World War, de Saedeleer found both home and inspiration in the valleys of…
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The bestselling author reflects on her difficult childhood, meeting her wife and taking on the smug, middle-class world of…
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The highs and lows of festive viewing, from Regency drama to TV’s crummiest game show.
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Though most aren’t showing in cinemas, a handful of streaming releases try to make the season bright.
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New Statesman critic Ryan Gilbey chooses his top movies of the year.
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New Statesman critic Rachel Cooke chooses her top programmes of the year.
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The audio highlights of the festive season.
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A new short story by leading British thriller writer Lawrence Osborne.
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The unorthodox philosophy that transformed a struggling mail-order DVD company into one of the tech industry’s great powers.
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The story of our culinary landscape is one of changing tastes and widening inequality.
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Between the wars, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Martin Heidegger, Ernst Cassirer and Walter Benjamin sought to transform the world by giving…
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Graham Greene was the consummate literary professional. But a new biography shows how profound mental instability shaped his chaotic…
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Two new poems by Alison Brackenbury.
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In a difficult year, let’s give children the best and most cheering books.
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Sedaris’ The Best of Me, Atwood’s Dearly, Dale’s The Prime Ministers and Believe in Magic by Turner.
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Dara McAnulty’s Diary of a Young Naturalist is written in tumbling, intelligent, young prose that rolls quickly through the…
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Thanks to his good humour and hard work, football fans fell in love with the not-so-cool but incredibly dedicated…
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A new poem by Ben Wilkinson
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I am unable to stop my mind racing with worries, from Pfizer side-effects to post-Brexit transport blockages.
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The British psychotherapist discusses her person-centred approach to therapy and facing grief in an age of crisis.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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The year of lockdowns and remote working may seem like a blur – but one cognitive psychologist explains why remembering the pandemic…
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Trump’s indifference towards Covid-19 is a near-perfect echo of the handling of HIV/Aids under Ronald Reagan.
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Inequalities run deep in the US, but protests across the world prove the political power of collective action.
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As Covid-19 prompted life to move online and distance mattered less, globalisation was not reversed but recast.
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It’s difficult to remember anything about this year apart from the pandemic, except that Succession served as a good escape.
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The public have been reassured by the deputy chief medical officer’s folksy analogies and “Mum test”.
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Plus as the stadiums stood silent, lots of well-loved commentary clichés have kept us amusingly distracted.
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This year more than ever we’ll all be doing a lot of muddling through, and hanging on stoically for…
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Christmas involves a temporary reinsertion into the family home, and this year I’ll have a four-legged friend sharing the sofa.
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The musician discusses the Second World War fighter pilot Douglas Bader, Winston Churchill and The Great British Bake Off.
ByEmail [email protected] if you would like to be the New Statesman‘s Subscriber of the Week.
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This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
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It’s going to be a strange festive period for most, so indulge with a dinner of stollen, boozy mince…
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I am unable to stop my mind racing with worries, from Pfizer side-effects to post-Brexit transport blockages.
By
Trump’s indifference towards Covid-19 is a near-perfect echo of the handling of HIV/Aids under Ronald Reagan.
By
The British psychotherapist discusses her person-centred approach to therapy and facing grief in an age of crisis.
By
Inequalities run deep in the US, but protests across the world prove the political power of collective action.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
The year of lockdowns and remote working may seem like a blur – but one cognitive psychologist explains why remembering the pandemic…
By
As Covid-19 prompted life to move online and distance mattered less, globalisation was not reversed but recast.
By
It’s difficult to remember anything about this year apart from the pandemic, except that Succession served as a good escape.
By
The public have been reassured by the deputy chief medical officer’s folksy analogies and “Mum test”.
By
New Statesman critic Ryan Gilbey chooses his top movies of the year.
By
New Statesman critic Rachel Cooke chooses her top programmes of the year.
By
The audio highlights of the festive season.
By
The highs and lows of festive viewing, from Regency drama to TV’s crummiest game show.
By
Though most aren’t showing in cinemas, a handful of streaming releases try to make the season bright.
By
New Statesman contributors tell the stories behind their favourite photographs.
By
In a difficult year, let’s give children the best and most cheering books.
By
Dara McAnulty’s Diary of a Young Naturalist is written in tumbling, intelligent, young prose that rolls quickly through the…
By
Plus as the stadiums stood silent, lots of well-loved commentary clichés have kept us amusingly distracted.
By
Thanks to his good humour and hard work, football fans fell in love with the not-so-cool but incredibly dedicated…
By
A new poem by Ben Wilkinson
By
The musician discusses the Second World War fighter pilot Douglas Bader, Winston Churchill and The Great British Bake Off.
ByEmail [email protected] if you would like to be the New Statesman‘s Subscriber of the Week.
By
Two new poems by Alison Brackenbury.
By
Christmas involves a temporary reinsertion into the family home, and this year I’ll have a four-legged friend sharing the sofa.
By
Sedaris’ The Best of Me, Atwood’s Dearly, Dale’s The Prime Ministers and Believe in Magic by Turner.
By
This year more than ever we’ll all be doing a lot of muddling through, and hanging on stoically for…
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
By
It’s going to be a strange festive period for most, so indulge with a dinner of stollen, boozy mince…
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Suzanne Moore, Simon Armitage, Musa Okwonga, Olivia Laing and others recall life-changing moments.
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People think they know about comas but they don’t. It’s not like the films.
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Their performance showed me that sincerity always beats irony.
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Watching Adrian Lester on stage, I realised that there was such a thing as transcendent performance.
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It’s one long performance, one long evening shading into brilliant night.
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I was finishing the first draft of my second novel and hoping to see something that might improve the…
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When I met the late JG Ballard for the first time, around 20 years ago in a Covent Garden…
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The impact of the piece, on me and on everyone else in the hall that night, was overwhelming.
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I left the Albers retrospective feeling a mixture of triumph and rage.
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I could see that he was moved by the story, perhaps uncomfortably so.
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Beardsley’s exquisite line drawings opened my eyes to art.
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I felt I was entering the adult world.
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A whole gang of us had gone to 333 in Old Street check out the music – but my friend…
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It was 1965; I was a 16-year-old schoolboy besotted by classical music but only, so far, on record.
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It didn’t make me a rock convert: but it hooked me on live music.
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Three pints with Mick from four doors down was all it took for me to sign up.
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“I’m trans,” I told a friend on the steps outside, after one of those dazzling nights.
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I was 12 when I asked my parents if I could stay up late to watch Sergei Eisenstein’s Ivan…
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I still remember it, aged six, right down to the green carpet and purple seats.
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The exhibition turned me from a grumpy old man into a weeping 15-year-old boy.
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I met a great artist for the first time when I was 19, in 1966, Alfred Hitchcock came to…
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I became the writer I wanted to be writing from a city that reacted the quickest and smartest to…
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I finally met the hero of my youth, Charles Aznavour, at 57. He didn’t disappoint.
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From Alpine tunnels to the Zambian border, seeing the world by train brings adventure, intriguing company – and a deep…
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She has written hits for Rihanna, Cher and Christina Aguilera – and she’s been dropped by a series of major…
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An image of imperial hubris or an environmental allegory?
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A new short story by Kate Atkinson.
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From wild beasts to princesses.
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Having lived in Fair Isle, the most remote inhabited island in Britain, and edited the magazine Shetland Life, Tallack…
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Oates’s new novel is a chilling and eerie read.
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Through the story of her grandmother’s rural Home Counties pub, Laura Thompson offers us a lyrical portrait of a…
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The streaming service is trying out the Hallmark strategy – pumping out intentionally average festive films in absurdly high…
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The country’s Belt and Road programme is less a revolution than a reversion to a previous state.
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From American Animals to Roma.
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Tim Clark’s book makes a subtle but very important point: wouldn’t it be better to learn about your parents’ or…
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One man’s attempt to catch every second of Christian Marclay’s astonishing 24-hour film installation, The Clock.
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A new poem by Helen Mort
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From Mary Poppins Returns to Holmes and Watson.
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No indisputable evidence exists for a “real” King Arthur, but, fictional or not, Britain has always needed him.
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From Sandra to Mostly Lit.
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“Before your LSD session, read Siddartha and Steppenwolf,” advised Timothy Leary.
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From Killing Eve to A Very English Scandal.
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Forest magic, Angelina and the Queen of Scots.
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I get a rush of gratitude that I was a teenager when we had the mindless proletarian jollity of…
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The new and diverse freshman class will be arriving on Capitol Hill with a spring in their step.
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In their correspondence, Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin displayed the combination of realpolitik, illusion and hubris that is essential for…
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From Agatha Christie to, er, Anne Widdecombe.
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There can be the assumption that everyone has a safe family to withdraw to at Christmas.
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In garages and sheds, a dedicated band of amateurs is trying to answer the biggest question in energy: whether…
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Hit hard by nouvelle cuisine and the financial crash, seasonal trade here isn’t what it once was.
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My gratitude to my hosts-cum-landlords knows no bounds.
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A winter wood reveals the bones of the landscape it grows upon, the geographical contours of slopes, gullies and…
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In the past five years, 450 GP practices have closed – and patients suffer when their doctors don’t truly…
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I break songs down into small morsels, getting hooked by tiny details, passing moments that offer fleeting glimpses of heaven.
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Two years ago, I got an email from a commissioning editor asking if I felt like working my way through…
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In 2018, despite the prompting of President Macron, the EU missed a crucial window for reform. Can it heal…
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In the past few days in Buenos Aires, following the PM has been bizarre in the extreme.
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Season’s greetings, bottle of wine, will you still need me, will you still read me, when I tell you…
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David Miliband spent another year persistently refusing to move back to Britain and found a new centrist party.
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A C-section is probably the worst place to be when your tongue still tastes of Jägerbomb and you’re sweating…
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The writer talks Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, insects, and contemplating life and death.
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The unlikely rise of the bestselling children’s author.
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Like the rebel theologian, we believe in the perfectibility of mankind, the ability of people to make the right…
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The veteran Bennite organiser on Brexit, Gramsci, the Soviet Union and planning for “when Jeremy and I are both dead”.
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If I abandon my diary for only a few days, it scares me how much I struggle to fill…
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The explosion on Pan Am Flight 103 ripped the aircraft apart and the debris plummeted on to the roofs…
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Your festive dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
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Plus: the more I know about Brexit, the less I feel I know.
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From gammon to centrist parties, 2018 has been a rollercoaster from start to finish. And, quite frankly, we’re glad to…
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I started just as Obama became president of the US and thought I was just passing through, on my…
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By harnessing the idealism and ambition that inspired the postwar generation, Britain can remake itself once more.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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Featuring true-crime, musical dissection, mental health and an eccentric horologist.
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The album transformed my understanding of what songs could do.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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Ali Smith, Jonathan Coe, Sarah Perry, George Saunders and others pick their all-time favourites.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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From the Long Players series: writers on their most cherished albums.
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The comedy writer on Stephen King novels, Nazi hunters, and his rejected sitcom theme tune.
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Featuring a zinger from Ken Dodd, showing that at 90 he still has a finger on the local tickling…
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I came away from my 25 December shift feeling I hadn’t made a jot of real difference to anyone.
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In 1976, when I was 14, I “got GORGEOUS pressies – hairdryer, earrings, perfume. Really GREAT day.”
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My children, in correspondence with me, have noted that I have taken surprisingly well to rural life.
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This is set to be the easiest year yet for plant munchers and those catering for them.
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This BBC Radio 4 adaptation zig-zags between feeling tones in a woozy, chameleonic way.
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Plus, the small screen highlights of 2017 that you may have missed.
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When women’s stories are respected as much as men’s, it results in diverse, exciting work.
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James Franco’s film tells the bewildering story of The Room, generally considered the world’s worst movie.
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Rhys Ifans gives a Scrooge that is wonderfully funny, seductive and interactive with the audience.
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The reinvention of an R&B star.
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A new poem by Matt Howard.
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The former Archbishop reviews The Political Samaritan: How Power Hijacked a Parable by Nick Spencer.
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Featuring histories and tasting guides, booze-soaked memoirs, and a global tour of natural wineries.
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At the time, I heard plenty about the unhappiness of civil servants and ministers. But the scale of the discontent…
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This is a story of how some adversities get conquered, and how others still require conquering.
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Marion Rankine writes that, in death, the brolly “is good for very little else”.
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Dennis Glover, an Australian political speechwriter, has written a fictional homage to the moral crusader.
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Angus McLaren explores a seedy tale from 1930s London.
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Norman Davies explainas how the places in which human beings fashion their identities are shaped by migration and the…
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A snap general election, you say – what could possibly go wrong? Helen Lewis, Anoosh Chakelian, Stephen Bush and…
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Slovenia is a small country on the sunny side of the Alps, once part of communist Yugoslavia. The streets…
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He is often described as the most successful politician of his generation – even by those who despise him.…
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Hawfinches are legendarily mysterious, secretive and difficult to find, writes the author of H Is for Hawk.
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His work can help us negotiate a path between the extremes of radical right and revolutionary left.
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We are on the cusp of a new era of computing, with Google, IBM and other tech companies using…
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Just 15 per cent of people now consider themselves to be members of the Church of England.
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This year, at the age of 83, the Tory peer became one of the oldest rebels in history.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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There has been a 20 per cent drop in choir membership in the valleys in the past ten years.
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In sport, a critical mass of right-handers are required to make left-handers look good.
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They have gone from being obsessed with the personal lives of politicians to, basically, not giving a damn.
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What can happen inside a church building? Is it sacred space and if so, what are the limits?
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I looked at my feet and walked past the man who had no idea that I was his son.
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The former Labour leader on tech, the Middle East and the choice facing Labour – carry on with a hard…
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A new poem by Ben Okri, on Brexit and our times.
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International Men’s Day could and should be just like Christmas: a celebration of shared humanity.
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Theresa May has perhaps become the auntie who is invited for the turkey feast but not the party.
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The writer talks Brexit, finding plot holes in the Bible, and staying positive in a depressing world.
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The next general election will be won on the battlefield of ideas – and our party is more than…
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The Award For Casual Bragging? There could only be one winner.
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Brexit presents a host of potential problems that Ireland never asked for and could really do without.
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Labour is no longer a party of centre-left social democracy.
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2017 was a difficult year – but there was also cause for hope.
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