How Michael Rosen returned from the brink of death
The children’s author on surviving Covid and the “chaos and contradiction” of the Conservative government’s pandemic crisis.
By
The children’s author on surviving Covid and the “chaos and contradiction” of the Conservative government’s pandemic crisis.
By
We should start owning our reading and asking more serious questions about what place literary education has in our…
By
Why so many of us are struggling to imagine a return to the pre-coronavirus routine, and fear life after lockdown.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Wesminster.
By
How Xi Jinping will use the political opportunity provided by the coronavirus crisis to exploit a divided EU.
By
The advocates of herd immunity remind us why it’s always worth checking the credentials of academics, and why county cricket…
By
Physician Sharon Moalem on the role our sex chromosomes play in immunity and genetic advantage.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
Why political choirs are on the rise, even in the face of a pandemic.
By
Richard Mabey’s powers of noticing made him the godfather of “the new nature writing”. At 80, he reflects on…
By
How a movement of people who hear voices is reshaping our understanding of mental illness – and consciousness itself.
By
When the pandemic hit I was hurled from the life of a metropolitan millennial cliché to caring for two little girls in rural Oxfordshire.
By
Often heralded as the best decade ever, the 1990s brought dark warnings about the future – and many have come…
By
Following a tough winter in lockdown, in January the nation treated itself to a new political psychodrama.
By
This time last year I went for a very ordinary walk, unaware of the disruption, trauma and solitude that…
By
By peddling the politics of grievance and waging tedious culture wars, the right has retreated into a realm of fantasy.…
By
How the pandemic is transforming our relationship with work, leisure and care.
By
An exotic, acquisitive bird-watching trip on the other side of the world already feels like an artefact of another age.…
By
Under lockdown, the City of Light has been thrown into terrible darkness.
By
The era of peak globalisation is over. For those of us not on the front line, clearing the mind and…
By
The notoriously high prison population in the US is starting to decline – so why is the number of jailed…
By
Political deadlock in Kabul, the onset of coronavirus, and a resurgent Taliban – Afghanistan’s future looks bleaker than ever.
By
I am the result of the movement of bodies on ships. Sails, winches, shackles and cane fields. I am…
By
The visionary English novelist’s dystopian imagination, defined by cataclysmic events, quarantines and technological isolation, has never felt so prescient.
By
Hilary Mantel, Rowan Williams, Elif Shafak, Michael Morpurgo and more on the cultural artefacts and pursuits that bring them…
By
A lethal pandemic was considered the most serious security risk to the UK. But nothing was done.
By
The former human rights lawyer aspires to unite not only the troubled Labour Party but the country. But who is…
By
In the 1930s, the creator of Maigret travelled the world as a journalist. His photographs reveal an artistic sensibility…
By
A survivor of the Somme, the man who invented Winnie-the-Pooh wrangled with his conscience in his non-fiction – trying…
By
Could a better understanding of how society affects sickness and the brain help us solve medical mysteries?
By
The novel veers between jet-setting farce and musings on recent issues of Current Biology.
By
How the crises of our times pose fundamental questions about the role of the nation state in our survival
By
Harry Rée was a grammar school teacher when war broke out in 1939. Then he joined Churchill’s secret army.
By
A new short story by Bernardine Evaristo.
By
A new poem by Matt Howard.
By
Seldon’s The Impossible Office?, Warner’s Inventory of a Life Mislaid, Nolan’s Acts of Desperation and Shukla’s Brown Baby.
By
Featuring remote islands and even more remote parents.
By
A new poem by Simon Armitage.
By
The trouble of focusing in a fractured world.
By
What to do with bored, fractious children in lockdown conditions? Read with them.
By
Her sly, rich novels do not seem tailor-made for cinema – but 100 years after her birth, Highsmith’s compelling…
By
A new HBO documentary about Tina Turner shows how her victimhood became a commodity.
By
The young artist’s nights of dissipation were at odds with the sunny fecundity of his landscapes.
By
The award-winning artist on race, humour and art in a time of crisis.
By
The relentlessly cheery pictures found in medical centres today are a far cry from the pious, grand and distressing…
By
Watching the new series has made me wonder if I need to up my intake of vitamin D or…
By
Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan star as windswept lovers in a movie that is more than just “Portrait of…
By
Phil Tinline digs through history, journalism, fiction and film to try to understand why the idea of being “in…
By
It’s also the most popular show on Netflix right now.
By
From Trolls World Tour to Disney+.
By
This crime series is a great imposter story.
By
Actor Kerry Shale writes and stars in a radio play about Full Metal Jacket.
By
Why Boris Johnson’s insistence that the UK’s unlocking is “irreversible” is a risky one.
By
The names we give to roads, schools and buildings are important – and nowhere is this more apparent than…
By
At one time most Germans agreed with Covid rules, but after a long winter everyone is fed up of acting responsibly.
By
The hatred between Salmond and Sturgeon has Shakespearean depths, and beyond their personal struggle the unity of the kingdom is at…
By
What a new book, written by a neuroscientist and heroin user, gets wrong about drug decriminalisation.
By
China’s new industrial strategy has proved as much of a shock to British politics as Brexit and the triumph…
By
This year marks the 300th anniversary of the office of prime minister, so it’s probably about time we asked:…
By
The Labour Party has never much liked being led, and in his best moments so far Starmer has threatened…
By
Life feels so savagely hollow to me right now that to look closely at an hour seems terrifying.
By
Italy is an individual shut up in a room with the urgent voice of the news bulletin.
By
The pandemic is forcing us out of our routines, individually and collectively.
By
For perhaps the first time in 32 centuries, Jews around the world will be unable to celebrate the festival…
By
Language and thinking of war could be used to justify and make palatable this administration’s rejection of refugees.
By
In east London, Tower Hamlets Council has shut Victoria Park, meaning more people are being crowded into smaller places.
By
We are the waterfront against which waves of Covid-19 patients are beginning to break.
By
It was a moment of magical mutuality, a public coming together of a kind one seldom if ever experiences.
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
By
Even if Covid-19 is eventually defeated, it will take far longer to remedy the social ills it has exposed.
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
By
In the UK, often cast as one of Europe’s most atomised societies, more than 700,000 people have volunteered for…
By
Go-Betweens drummer Lindy Morrison endured the trials of being a woman in the music business in the 1980s, and her story should…
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s Richard II, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByEmail [email protected] if you would like to be the New Statesman‘s Subscriber of the Week.
By
The musician discusses the late Plaid Cymru MP Gwynfor Evans, Desolation Radio and advice he received from Howard Marks.
By
As I propped the hut door ajar so that my winter visitor could escape, I experienced a slight twinge…
By
Like many public figures these days, Burchill’s schtick is to say what she claims is unsayable, and get paid…
By
The celebrity chef on the moon landings, Greek philosophers and getting angry with his phone.
By
Before games, they would have steak and chips. And, of course, smoke like chimneys.
By
There’s only one thing I want to do, and that is to be outside.
By
I embark on the new Hilary Mantel novel, The Mirror and the Light, and immediately find myself lost in it, grateful…
By
Weeds are the native vegetation exercising their birthright.
By
The most important thing to do is stay in bed. Stay in bed all day. Never mind not leaving…
By
Seldon’s The Impossible Office?, Warner’s Inventory of a Life Mislaid, Nolan’s Acts of Desperation and Shukla’s Brown Baby.
By
A new poem by Matt Howard.
By
Featuring remote islands and even more remote parents.
By
Why so many of us are struggling to imagine a return to the pre-coronavirus routine, and fear life after lockdown.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Wesminster.
By
Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan star as windswept lovers in a movie that is more than just “Portrait of…
By
This year marks the 300th anniversary of the office of prime minister, so it’s probably about time we asked:…
By
China’s new industrial strategy has proved as much of a shock to British politics as Brexit and the triumph…
By
Phil Tinline digs through history, journalism, fiction and film to try to understand why the idea of being “in…
By
What a new book, written by a neuroscientist and heroin user, gets wrong about drug decriminalisation.
By
As I propped the hut door ajar so that my winter visitor could escape, I experienced a slight twinge…
By
Like many public figures these days, Burchill’s schtick is to say what she claims is unsayable, and get paid…
By
Go-Betweens drummer Lindy Morrison endured the trials of being a woman in the music business in the 1980s, and her story should…
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s Richard II, refers to the whole of Britain…
By
The Labour Party has never much liked being led, and in his best moments so far Starmer has threatened…
By
At one time most Germans agreed with Covid rules, but after a long winter everyone is fed up of acting responsibly.
By
The names we give to roads, schools and buildings are important – and nowhere is this more apparent than…
ByEmail [email protected] if you would like to be the New Statesman‘s Subscriber of the Week.
By
The hatred between Salmond and Sturgeon has Shakespearean depths, and beyond their personal struggle the unity of the kingdom is at…
By
The musician discusses the late Plaid Cymru MP Gwynfor Evans, Desolation Radio and advice he received from Howard Marks.
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
By
Even if Covid-19 is eventually defeated, it will take far longer to remedy the social ills it has exposed.
By
Why Boris Johnson’s insistence that the UK’s unlocking is “irreversible” is a risky one.
By
Watching the new series has made me wonder if I need to up my intake of vitamin D or…
By
Italy is an individual shut up in a room with the urgent voice of the news bulletin.
By
Before games, they would have steak and chips. And, of course, smoke like chimneys.
By
The pandemic is forcing us out of our routines, individually and collectively.
By
For perhaps the first time in 32 centuries, Jews around the world will be unable to celebrate the festival…
By
Language and thinking of war could be used to justify and make palatable this administration’s rejection of refugees.
By
In east London, Tower Hamlets Council has shut Victoria Park, meaning more people are being crowded into smaller places.
By
Life feels so savagely hollow to me right now that to look closely at an hour seems terrifying.
By
How Xi Jinping will use the political opportunity provided by the coronavirus crisis to exploit a divided EU.
By
The advocates of herd immunity remind us why it’s always worth checking the credentials of academics, and why county cricket…
By
Physician Sharon Moalem on the role our sex chromosomes play in immunity and genetic advantage.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
Why political choirs are on the rise, even in the face of a pandemic.
By
A new poem by Simon Armitage.
By
It’s also the most popular show on Netflix right now.
By
What to do with bored, fractious children in lockdown conditions? Read with them.
By
The trouble of focusing in a fractured world.
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
By
We are the waterfront against which waves of Covid-19 patients are beginning to break.
By
It was a moment of magical mutuality, a public coming together of a kind one seldom if ever experiences.
By
From Trolls World Tour to Disney+.
By
In the UK, often cast as one of Europe’s most atomised societies, more than 700,000 people have volunteered for…
By
This crime series is a great imposter story.
By
Actor Kerry Shale writes and stars in a radio play about Full Metal Jacket.
By
Weeds are the native vegetation exercising their birthright.
By
The most important thing to do is stay in bed. Stay in bed all day. Never mind not leaving…
By
I embark on the new Hilary Mantel novel, The Mirror and the Light, and immediately find myself lost in it, grateful…
By
There’s only one thing I want to do, and that is to be outside.
By
The celebrity chef on the moon landings, Greek philosophers and getting angry with his phone.
By