Personal Story: How I learned to exist as prey
With a stranger’s throwaway comment, my entire connection to the natural world had been recalibrated.
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With a stranger’s throwaway comment, my entire connection to the natural world had been recalibrated.
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For decades the country has been brutalised by dictatorship, war, corruption and unemployment. Now Iraq’s young people are risking…
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The Conservatives are dominant but their plans are contradictory, seeking to fuse a shallow tech utopianism with national populism.
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The story of the fight for gender quality is littered with unlikeable feminists. But do we need to like…
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In 1979 the forces that have left the Islamic world in chaos were unleashed – but it didn’t have…
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In her richly observed cultural history, Roberts tracks down the stories behind Siberia’s most socially significant pianos.
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This is not a memoir for anyone looking for a lengthy statement of values or a fly-on-the-wall account of…
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In his third novel, Thayil turns his attention to the “New India” of Hindu nationalism and high-rise luxury apartments.
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Enright’s new novel about the daughter of an actress finds itself in a biographical straitjacket.
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The celebrated French writer Emmanuel Carrère on why he is drawn to monsters, murderers, enigmas – and himself.
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The price for being the most famous painting in the world was that it also became the most stolen.…
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The latest in a long line of adaptations of Austen’s novel doesn’t attempt anything too radical.
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A new BBC Radio 4 show about the poet is incredibly dense and atmospheric.
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Beneath its soapy subplots and shiny locations lies something far messier.
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Alice’s Adventures Under Ground has vitality, inventiveness and – as Barry likes to insist – tunes coming out of its…
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
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The farcical arrangement of our rail network is symptomatic of the weaknesses of Britain’s economic model.
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Our divorce from the EU will leave us, like characters in a Dantean parable, lapping frantically at a lake of English…
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The moral of the story is this: look at the menu carefully before ordering.
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Faced with a health scare, I couldn’t believe how angry I felt at being powerless.
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The author talks re-runs of Would I Lie To You?, Clement Attlee and getting advice from Ted Hughes.
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Imagine swine flu-levels of population panic plus a virus capable of causing millions of hospitalisations, overlaid on an NHS…
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How Irish politics has been transformed.
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How one person can accelerate a pandemic.
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After five years of Boris Johnson’s comically ill-conceived projects, voters will want unflamboyant competence.
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The French economist and author of Capital and Ideology on Brexit, Labour’s defeat and the next crisis.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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For the majority of Scottish nationalists, independence is a goal that overrides all failures.
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Would I have followed the moral norms of a hundred years ago?
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The account tweets out the combination codes for cubicles across the capital.
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The party is peculiarly contaminated by the legacy of abandoning its Leave voters and by a leader many voters…
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You may argue the corporation got its election mix wrong, but you cannot deny it is the broadest free-speech…
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Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer has resigned as CDU leader, destroying the chancellor’s carefully laid succession plan.
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No other major Western country has allowed so many of its strategic industries, assets and pre-eminent companies to fall…
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Tory MPs fear that the party’s ideologically incoherent December manifesto was not just for Christmas but for life.
By
Would I have followed the moral norms of a hundred years ago?
By
In his third novel, Thayil turns his attention to the “New India” of Hindu nationalism and high-rise luxury apartments.
By
The account tweets out the combination codes for cubicles across the capital.
By
Enright’s new novel about the daughter of an actress finds itself in a biographical straitjacket.
By
In her richly observed cultural history, Roberts tracks down the stories behind Siberia’s most socially significant pianos.
By
This is not a memoir for anyone looking for a lengthy statement of values or a fly-on-the-wall account of…
By
The party is peculiarly contaminated by the legacy of abandoning its Leave voters and by a leader many voters…
By
You may argue the corporation got its election mix wrong, but you cannot deny it is the broadest free-speech…
By
Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer has resigned as CDU leader, destroying the chancellor’s carefully laid succession plan.
By
How Irish politics has been transformed.
By
How one person can accelerate a pandemic.
By
A new BBC Radio 4 show about the poet is incredibly dense and atmospheric.
By
After five years of Boris Johnson’s comically ill-conceived projects, voters will want unflamboyant competence.
By
Beneath its soapy subplots and shiny locations lies something far messier.
By
The French economist and author of Capital and Ideology on Brexit, Labour’s defeat and the next crisis.
By
The latest in a long line of adaptations of Austen’s novel doesn’t attempt anything too radical.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
For the majority of Scottish nationalists, independence is a goal that overrides all failures.
By
Faced with a health scare, I couldn’t believe how angry I felt at being powerless.
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
By
Our divorce from the EU will leave us, like characters in a Dantean parable, lapping frantically at a lake of English…
By
The moral of the story is this: look at the menu carefully before ordering.
By
Imagine swine flu-levels of population panic plus a virus capable of causing millions of hospitalisations, overlaid on an NHS…
By
No other major Western country has allowed so many of its strategic industries, assets and pre-eminent companies to fall…
By
Tory MPs fear that the party’s ideologically incoherent December manifesto was not just for Christmas but for life.
By
The author talks re-runs of Would I Lie To You?, Clement Attlee and getting advice from Ted Hughes.
By
The farcical arrangement of our rail network is symptomatic of the weaknesses of Britain’s economic model.
By
Alice’s Adventures Under Ground has vitality, inventiveness and – as Barry likes to insist – tunes coming out of its…
By