Books
The life of an Exmoor stockman reads like bloody-knuckled rural noir
Through her interviews with the exuberant countryman ‘Tommy’ Collard, Catrina Davies provides a vivid picture of nature in the raw
The tragically short life of Bruno Schulz – and his complicated legacy
The Polish-Jewish writer and artist enjoyed all too brief acclaim before his murder in 1942. Benjamin Balint describes the ongoing battle for ownership of his final works
The savage power of 18th-century caricature
The politics of late Georgian England provided Gillray, Cruickshank and Rowlandson with perfect fodder for robust, merciless satire
A modern Cinderella story: Romantic Comedy, by Curtis Sittenfeld, reviewed
A rich, handsome rock star falls for a schlubby TV comedy writer in an enjoyable, traditional romcom, mystifyingly billed as ‘subversive’ and ‘searingly contemporary’
The attraction of freethinking humanism
Philip Hensher admires the humanists of the past, and finds them consistently kinder, more decent and generous than their contemporaries
A wilderness of mirrors
A young stage illusionist is recruited by the British secret service to extract a list of double agents concealed in a Russian magician’s stage prop
Dazzling wordplay: Man-Eating Typewriter, by Richard Milward, reviewed
A deranged anarchist plans to commit the crime of a century – with Polari, coded messages and a faulty typewriter contributing to the mayhem
Great men don’t shape history – but tiny microbes do
Jonathan Kennedy explores the (mainly) devastating effects of bacteria in the past – and now, as they proliferate and our resistance diminishes
Jolly good company
There are vignettes of many Cambridge contemporaries – including the mysterious John Sackur, the inspiration for the invisible man in Donkeys’ Years
A reluctant unbeliever
He dismisses the philosophy of religion as sixth-formish point-scoring. But are his own ruminations any more profound?
Farewell to the Belle Époque
Edward VII’s reign is generally seen as a bright interlude between Victorian primness and the Great War – but there was considerable unrest on many fronts
How a humiliating defeat secured Britain its empire
After the Amboyna massacre of 1623, the newly-fledged East India Company conceded the spice trade to the Dutch – to focus instead on the riches of India
Woman of mystery
A counterfactual history of modern America serves as a backdrop to the life of the enigmatic ‘X’ – a woman of multiple personae and impenetrable disguises
The Spanish Civil War still dominates our perception of modern Spain
Twentieth-century Spain was a violent, corrupt and volatile country – but that hardly made it an anomaly within Europe, says Sarah Watling
Writing about leaders
Historian Chris Wallace, who currently holds a professorship at the Faculty of Business, Government and Law at the University of…
Family friction
In the wake of their father’s death, a brother and sister recall the violent domestic dramas of their childhood
Find the lady: Tomás Nevinson, by Javier Marías, reviewed
A merciless ETA terrorist is in hiding in Spain – but which of three seemingly innocent women is she?
The fall of the Berlin Wall promised Europe a bright future – so what went wrong?
Timothy Garton Ash weighs the consequences of the push towards a single currency, the West’s dependence for energy on Russia, and Brexit, among much else
A Faustian bargain
Under the much-vaunted new secularism, Muslims were treated as second-class citizens at best - and were often the victims of mass pogroms
Our struggle to concentrate is nothing new
The buzz of modernity has plagued us since the Industrial Revolution – but even Thoreau tired of practising his ‘habit of attention’ at Walden Pond
Together and apart
Death permeates these stories, as Nell – a stand-in for Atwood – mourns the loss of her beloved partner Tig
A surreal account of lockdown
A complex novel explores the ways we try to understand a world that isn’t good or fair or causal or even comprehensible
The relationship between self and singer
If opera is acting, concealing the self behind a character, where does that leave the singer in the concert hall, caught between ventriloquist and dummy, wonders Ian Bostridge
The chaos of coronations over the centuries
From the mass panic of William the Conqueror’s to the drunken mayhem of Victoria’s, few coronations have passed off entirely peacefully
No happy endings
Traditional fairy tales are transposed to a modern setting and given a thrilling – often terrifying – twist