Who owns the Arctic?

Laleh Khalili

Two years​ after the end of the Civil War, William Seward, the US secretary of state, negotiated the purchase of ‘Russian America’ – Alaska – for $7.2 million, equivalent to $165 million today. The New York Times noted that the acquisition

includes the strip four hundred miles long, which extends down the coast, thus excluding a large part of British America from the...

 

Politics on Speed

William Davies

Onemorning in the summer of 2016, a few weeks into the disorientating aftermath of Britain’s vote to leave the European Union, my wife and I sat in a community centre in Poplar, East London with our baby son. Our three-year-old daughter must have been at nursery. The occasion was a ‘consultation’ hosted by Tower Hamlets Council on the ‘future of Children’s...

 

De Kooning in Cuba

T.J. Clark

Willem de Kooning​’s Suburb in Havana was painted in 1958. The canvas seems to have had its first showing at Sidney Janis’s gallery in New York, part of an exhibition called Eight American Painters that opened on 5 January 1959. Four days before, on New Year’s Day, Fidel Castro’s forces entered Havana. It had been clear for much of 1958 that the Batista regime was...

 

History after Climate Change

Oliver Cussen

Alittle more​ than a decade ago, the historian Dipesh Chakrabarty organised a conference at the University of Chicago on the history and politics of the Anthropocene. Chakrabarty had published an article four years earlier in which he argued that the science of anthropogenic climate change undermined assumptions about agency, experience and causation that are fundamental to the writing of...

Short Cuts

Orbán’s Fall

Jan-Werner Müller

Can there be​ poetic justice in politics? Perhaps once in a lifetime. In 1989, a young Viktor Orbán bravely told the crowds in Budapest’s Heroes’ Square that it was time for the Russians to go home, just as protesters had demanded in 1956; almost four decades later, he was heckled on the campaign trail with the same words. There were more chants of ‘Ruszkik haza!’...

Diary

Ask Claude

Paul Taylor

It is possible​ that the first profession to be replaced by artificial intelligence will be that of computer programmer. As large language models become more powerful, there are concerns about their possible impact on jobs in fields such as medicine, law and banking, but these are still conversations about possibilities. The situation in programming is different: the technology works, and...

 

Death on the Thames

Andrew O’Hagan

On​ 12 December 1884, Henry James took a break from writing the novel that would be published as The Princess Casamassima and went on a research trip to Millbank Prison on the north bank of the Thames. The prison was swampy, labyrinthine and dark. In the novel, Hyacinth Robinson, an impressionable young bookbinder, goes there to visit his dying mother, whose criminal past, we soon learn, has...

 

Gwendoline Riley’s ‘Palm House’

Ange Mlinko

One can go​ long stretches without reading a contemporary novel in which children are vividly present, but parents – old, decrepit, dying or recently deceased – have seemed inescapable of late. Gwendoline Riley’s recent novels are a case in point. In First Love (2017) the narrator, Neve, contends with her galling, gallivanting mother while coming to the realisation that the...

 

Climate Proxies

Lorraine Daston

Proxiesstand in for something or someone else: a press secretary stands in for a politician; the number of citations a scientific paper gets stands in for its significance; the rise or fall of Gross Domestic Product stands in for the overall health of the economy. The proxy is never a perfect substitute for the person or thing it replaces. At best, the two are reliably correlated; at worst,...

 

Economic Warfare

Jamie Martin

In the 1990s,​ high-quality counterfeit $100 bills began to appear around the world. The United States Secret Service, the agency responsible for investigating fraudulent currency, claimed that these ‘supernotes’ were printed in North Korea, though it wasn’t clear how the intaglio printer, cotton-linen paper and colour-shifting ink had ended up there. Even so, numerous...

 

Harvey ‘C minus’ Mansfield

Colin Kidd

Harvey C. Mansfield, a professor of government at Harvard from 1962 until his retirement from teaching in 2023 at the age of 91, has never shirked any opportunity to burnish his reputation as a conservative ogre. His interventions in the campus culture wars have been plentiful, memorable and clumsy. One particular cause of ire is grade inflation, which he blames on greater racial diversity...

 

Len Deighton’s Spy World

Thomas Jones

Before​ he took to writing thrillers in the early 1960s, Len Deighton, who died in March at the age of 97, had worked as a railway clerk, a kitchen porter, a pastry chef, a flight attendant and a commercial artist. Having completed his national service in the RAF he used his demob grant to study at St Martin’s School of Art, going on to the Royal College of Art on a scholarship. After...

At Pallant House

On William Nicholson

Rosemary Hill

Katherine Mansfield’s​ short story ‘Bliss’ is a jewel-like study of a young woman, Bertha, poised unknowingly at a moment of crisis in her life. (It’s interesting not least for what it prefigures of Mrs Dalloway.) Bertha, preparing for a dinner party she will give that evening, arranges the fruit she has ordered: tangerines, ‘apples stained with strawberry pink....

 

Henrik Pontoppidan’s ‘A Fortunate Man’

Tim Parks

In​ 1870 Hans Christian Andersen published his last novel, Lykke-Peer (‘Lucky Peer’). Felix and Peer are born in the same house on the same day. Felix leads a conventional existence of wealth and privilege. Peer’s life is all struggle, though he’s a talented singer and composer. He goes to the city and experiences every kind of hardship and temptation, but will not...

 

Post-Revolutionary Matchmaking

Jonny Bunning

‘Iwant a husband who is between sixty and seventy years old,’ announced a Parisian classified ad in 1813. ‘If possible, I’d prefer a former nobleman whose misfortunes, which are regrettably common, ruined him. I want him penniless, desiring to give him at least 3000 francs of life annuity. In addition, he will have accommodation in my townhouse and at my table.’...

 

Little Mags

Susannah Clapp

Little magazines​: big guns. It is hard to overestimate the high hopes and strong feelings swirling around papers which are small in funds and circulation but large in aspiration. For a time the London Review of Books might have been considered a little magazine: uncertain of its future but clear it wanted to put a spoke in the Falklands War. The Little Review, thought to have originated...

At Tate Modern

Nigerian Modernism

Gazelle Mba

Thecities most closely associated with modernism – Paris, Berlin, Vienna, Zurich – are all European. A number of recent exhibitions have sought to broaden this geography. Tropical Modernism: Architecture and Independence, which opened at the V&A in March 2024, considered the incorporation of modernist ideals into the architecture of postcolonial South Asia and West Africa....

 

Chants and Motets

Peter Phillips

In​ the 1938 edition of the Oxford Companion to Music, Percy Scholes defined composition as ‘the culmination of the mental and psychological process of a remarkable and inspired personality’. Even today, the notion of the Great Composer – the individual genius, whose inimitable music is an expression of a singular mind – still holds sway: the composers guaranteed to...

Close Readings 2026

On the Close Readings podcast, longstanding LRB contributors explore a literary period or theme through a selection of key works.

Listen to our four new series running in 2026: Narrative Poems, Nature in Crisis, London Revisited and Who’s afraid of realism? plus a free bonus series, The Man Behind the Curtain.

Read more about Close Readings 2026

LRB 45s: Poetry on vinyl

Why is the London Review of Books putting out records?

We liked the idea of marking the paper’s 45th anniversary with a series of 45 rpm vinyl singles, and drawing on our rich archive of poems made sense. A 7-inch record has space for about eleven minutes of spoken word. Happily, this equates to a long-ish poem – the kind that takes up a whole page or even a double-page spread in the LRB – being read in full.

Read more about LRB 45s: Poetry on vinyl
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