A “nearly-history” of the Eighties, Britain’s decade of boom, bust and Tory triumph
On Andy Beckett’s Promised You a Miracle: UK 80-82, a long view of an often misunderstood decade.
By
On Andy Beckett’s Promised You a Miracle: UK 80-82, a long view of an often misunderstood decade.
By
Industrial-scale murder, state collapse and huge displacement on Europe’s borders have destroyed old certainties.
By
George Osborne’s mission to capture and reshape the centre ground.
By
By refusing to join the EU resettlement programme, the Prime Minister has also undermined attempts to achieve a balanced, continent-wide…
By
“The only fire department on a university is the one that sends emergency vehicles when an alarm sounds.”
By
That song I abandoned back in 1987 because it didn’t sound very good? It still doesn’t sound very good.
By
“. . . genuine golden Tories, one; water-on-land Tories, one; hugging Tories, one. . . “
By
Mosley was coming over as the most clubbable man in the universe. Not a peep from Jeremy Vine.
By
Bill Clegg’s first novel – longlisted for the Man Booker Prize – is a reminder that anything could happen…
By
One imagines that the abilities of 47,000-plus employees sitting around on beanbags and drinking really good coffee could have…
By
“I have never thought that my life could be nearly as interesting as what my imagination could make of another’s…
By
The director comes across as both hypersensitive and unnervingly frank in The Blue Touch Paper.
By
The film shows how Pasolini located spiritual salvation in unremarkable lives.
By
You do need at least two syllables, preferably three, which is why English supporters shout ING-GER-LAND when they are…
By
Everything Is Happening by Michael Jacobs and The Rape of Europa by Charles FitzRoy.
By
The adaptation was – quite a rare feat, this – at once clichéd and anachronistic.
By
Scenes at Keleti station in Budapest conjure up echoes of past brutality towards Hungarian Jews, and the uprising against…
By
Salman Rushdie’s Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights and A Strangeness in My Mind by Orhan Pamuk.
By
Commons Confidential is back – and it’s just in time for the Labour leadership result. . .
By
The Story of the Lost Child is the final instalment in a literary phenomenon. But what does its elusive author really believe?
By
She is witty, self-deprecating and obviously smart in an offbeat way, so as to neutralise those inclined to dismiss…
By
Let it rot, and keep your little microbes happy.
By
Title yourself “Mx” on your gas bill, because small acts of linguistic rebellion can change the world.
By
Upwards of 30 Labour MPs would be prepared to defy the anti-war Jeremy Corbyn and support military action.
By
Before we trust Cameron on drone strikes, we should try to establish some facts. These are hard to come…
By