Two poems by Kathryn Maris
“The adulteress” and “The H Man”.
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“The adulteress” and “The H Man”.
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Italy’s prime minister – “Europe’s last Blairite” – vowed to take on vested interests and smash open the economy.…
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The Messianic restlessness of the justice secretary.
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There is nothing quite like watching oneself at work to spur development – and videos can help us understand…
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Our most secure encryption systems, such as RSA and elliptic curves, could be broken by quantum computing.
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Anthony Seldon’s books can have a teacher’s approach. Cameron, 7/10. Blair, 6/10, see me after class.
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When Larissa MacFarquhar told people she was working on a book about extreme altruists, she was asked the same,…
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Blue-on-blue violence has escalated in the Conservative Party.
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The defeat in the general election and then the arrival of an unexpected leader: MPs are grappling to understand…
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I booked a cottage called Primrose Hall. I realised on arrival that I had committed myself to five days…
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When Efraim Zuroff went abroad this summer, he visited about 25 sites of mass murder. “That’s how I have…
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One Labour MP in Brighton spotted a baby in a red Babygro and said to me: “There’s our next…
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There is value in strategic looseness.
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The slogan of the conference was “Straight talking, honest politics” but the real theme was modernisers v Corbynites.
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One notion I would contest is that Call Me Dave was planned as a hatchet job. There is a world of difference…
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A review of Ian Kershaw and Heinrich August Winkler’s accounts of Europe’s “age of catastrophe”, 1914-49.
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Chris Moyles has settled thoroughly into middlebrow white indie, positively tender compared to his days on Radio 1.
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In 1933, Frank Boyd Merriman, the Tory MP for Rusholme, was appointed a high court judge. At the by-election…
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The resilience of the right in Europe and the Anglosphere.
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I find that if I watch three live games in a weekend, which often happens, I have totally forgotten…
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Robert Bringhurst and the rediscovery of the Haida mythtellers.
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Experimental writing is not always immediately appreciated. As the Goldsmiths Prize for innovative fiction announces its 2015 shortlist, we…
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There is something unsettling about the western media’s fascination with North Korea, as these two books reveal.
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Jonathan Bate’s unauthorised biography confirms that, no matter how energetic his love life, Hughes’s obsession with Plath never faded.
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Germaine Greer looks for the real Shakespeare in James Shapiro’s 1606: the Year of Lear.
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The mirror is still there, though, into which I would, as Nigel Molesworth put it, gaze at my strange…
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At that time we did talk about the occupation of Ireland. Now we have to pretend we didn’t and it’s…
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Thanks to the success of Gravity, autumn is now the time of sophisticated cinematic spectaculars – hence the arrival…
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The slight lip around the edge is no mere bourgeois affectation; it keeps the food contained in its proper…
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Asking a decent editor to save this book would have been like asking a doctor to help a corpse that…
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Without even looking at Sutherland’s portrait, Churchill decreed it “a remarkable example of modern art”, cue much sycophantic laughter…
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Jeanette Winterson’s The Gap of Time is full of metaphorical riches.
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The Health Gap: the Challenge of an Unequal World by Michael Marmot reviewed.
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Neel Mukherjee is moved and unsettled by everything from psychological realism to ghost stories.
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Guernsey Airport is pretty weird; but then, so is the rest of the island.
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The art critic who contains multitudes.
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“Only looking back do I gather up the moments.”
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