Leader: We should never forget Arthur Labinjo-Hughes
Arthur’s suffering was sustained and exacerbated by lockdown, which has created a generation of “ghost children” who are lost…
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Arthur’s suffering was sustained and exacerbated by lockdown, which has created a generation of “ghost children” who are lost…
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Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
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The English Question: more than ever we need stories that help us make sense of the world.
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With admirable frankness my grocer writes on everything from her neighbours to current affairs. If only the government would…
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Our life won’t change in any meaningful way because we’ve signed a piece of paper – we’ll continue to…
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Now that Keir Starmer has drawn together a strong shadow cabinet, a government led by Labour could be closer…
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If the vice-president is failing to meet her targets, then some fault lies with the man setting them.
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The “rewriting of history” is not some act of professional misconduct but literally the job of professional historians.
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The issues of democracy and nationalism have never felt so urgent.
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A zero-Covid strategy can come at the expense of basic human decency.
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The woman who styles herself as “two-thirds Merkel, one-third Thatcher” could pose a serious threat to Macron’s chances of…
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’Tis the season for gift giving and – just like vaccinations – I am recommending everyone gets three Private…
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The journalist, biographer and White House chronicler on why we still can’t count the former president out.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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Many predicted the virus would become a mild illness akin to a common cold. But as the Omicron variant…
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At 80, the evolutionary scientist and atheist still courts controversy. Will his influence survive a passion for social media?
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What the writer teaches us about politics and the imagination in a time of crisis.
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I thought that I could retreat from the world outside, like a hedgehog or ladybird. But after Covid we…
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The not-quite vanished state is central to the history of Europe. Riding the RE1 train from Brandenburg to the…
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The Koofi family were airlifted to safety in August 2021. This is their story – and that of thousands…
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Brexit havoc, Tory sleaze and the brutal reality of Covid restrictions; the events of 2020-21 have provided colourful fodder…
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Spending this much time with relatives is a fundamentally doomed exercise. Mine have developed a ritual to cope.
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Continuity of care has been eroded in favour of “taxi-rank” medicine, where few people know their GP. Can that…
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The great Russian writer was no saint. But 200 years after his birth, his work shows how we might…
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The thriller writer’s journals record her vast appetite for sex, drink, violence and – above all – work.
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A new poem by Will Eaves.
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The year’s essential reading in 20 titles.
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There’s danger, delight and magic in the best children’s books of the festive season.
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The Nobel winner’s novel about a religious cult in 18th-century eastern Europe suffers from an addiction to digression and…
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1,000 Years of Joys and Sorrows by Ai, Oh William! by Strout, The Magician by Tóibín and The Ritual…
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In their 1999 film, the Wachowskis glimpsed the future of our digital lives. More remarkably, they shaped them.
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The Italian novelist considers the new adaptation of her dark seaside tale.
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For the Nebraskan painter, the soul of the nation lay in the Midwest of his boyhood.
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This is the highlight of what’s on at the movies this Christmas – but musical-averse audiences do have other…
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From Around the World in 80 Days to A Very British Scandal.
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How does one translate the weirdness and wonder of fantasy into accessible drama? Like this.
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The unassuming brown seed was as much a pawn in the colonial game as the precious stones of the…
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It makes me feel 100 years old to be complaining about the season’s over-commercialisation, but isn’t it really about…
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I braced myself for a Shrek-like abundance of earwax, “There doesn’t seem to be much there,” the nurse said,…
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I think this is the bravest thing I have written, because it is also the most foolish.
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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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Every half-decent goal is world-class. A goalie is world-class after a simple save. Even throw-ins can be world-class.
ByThe solutions to Anorak’s Christmas 2021 crossword on an alphabetical theme.
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The comedian on Suleiman the Magnificent, Starsky and Hutch and why he should have been a town crier.
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