From the next issue

Iran, Week One

Tom Stevenson

The attack launched on Iran by the US and Israel on 28 February was a textbook case of international aggression, justified in only the most cursory fashion by fictional Iranian threats and undertaken with no clear aims and no clear demands or terms. In announcing the war Donald Trump described it as a wholesale attack on both government and state. The US and Israel would ‘raze their...

From the blog

The dry and the wet burn together

Eskandar Sadeghi-Boroujerdi

3 March 2026

The war launched against Iran by the United States and Israel is a war of choice and of hubris. There is scarcely even the pretence that it was compelled by evidence of an Iranian dash for a bomb or an imminent attack. Such claims do not survive scrutiny; they barely withstand repetition.

Short Cuts

Versions of Melania

Deborah Friedell

Donald Trump​ began seriously thinking about running for office in 1998, so it’s said, when the wrestler Jesse ‘The Body’ Ventura won the Minnesota governorship on the Reform Party ticket. Ventura’s campaign had been dismissed as a sideshow by Democrats and Republicans alike. He was no one’s idea of a professional politician and he made that the point. Only a...

 

Overdiagnosis

Paul Taylor

In October last year​ 2.17 million people, 507,000 of them children, were in contact with mental health services in England. In 2023-24, 958,000 children, 8 per cent of the twelve million children in England, had an active referral to the Children and Young People’s Mental Health Services. In 2013-14 this figure was 157,000. Some see in this huge increase evidence of welcome attention...

 

Mandelson and the Lobbyists

James Butler

Consequences​ are rare in British politics. A well-handled resignation can be temporary. If you’re resourceful enough, exit from Westminster can be parlayed into directorships and consultancies, or the media circuit might beckon. Such soft landings aren’t available to Peter Mandelson, whose long-deserved fall is finally absolute. Mandelson was fired as ambassador to the United...

 

Marlowe’s Betrayals

Michael Dobson

What is it​ we still want from Christopher Marlowe? To judge from their recent reception, it’s not his plays. Apart from Steven Pimlott’s Doctor Faustus in 2004 and Michael Boyd’s condensed Tamburlaine in 2014, there have been few outstanding Marlowe revivals in the 21st century, and his plays have been put on only in small venues. The second half of Pimlott’s Doctor...

 

Dinosaurs on the Ark

Alexander Bevilacqua

In Williamstown, Kentucky​, no small distance from the ‘mountains of Ararat’, the biblical resting place of Noah’s Ark, a 510-foot-long wooden structure rises from a ridge. The Ark Encounter – less than an hour’s drive from Cincinnati International Airport and within a day’s drive of much of the Bible Belt – is an attempt to recreate Noah’s...

 

Caravaggio’s Clothes

Erin Maglaque

In bed​, John Berger was once asked by a lover: who’s your favourite painter? Caravaggio, he replied. There are two kinds of desire, according to Berger: the desire to take and the ‘desire to be taken’. Caravaggio painted the second kind. The desire ‘to lose oneself’, ‘the most abandoned, the most desperate’ form of wanting: this is what Caravaggio...

 

Brzezinski’s Cold War

Jackson Lears

Zbigniew Brzezinski​ was a difficult man. As a child, he stood out from his three brothers in being ‘emotionally detached and hard to please’, according to his sympathetic biographer, Edward Luce. He slept on hard floors to feel the discomfort experienced by the less fortunate. In his high school yearbook photo, ‘the eye is drawn to his hawklike nose and piercing...

Diary

Divorce, Beijing Style

Long Ling

What colour​ is a divorce certificate? I’d heard it was green – a neat visual counterpoint to the bright red marriage certificate. Red in Chinese culture is the colour of happiness, of joy and also of officialdom. Marriages are announced on red banners; gifts are enclosed in red envelopes. Brides wear red dresses and use red bedsheets, and there are red scraps of firecrackers in...

 

Origin Legends

Barbara Newman

Earlymodernists have long bragged, to the annoyance of medievalists, that their period invented such concepts as ‘the individual’ and ‘scientific rationality’. More recently, medievalists have laid claim to evils such as racism and xenophobia, less to vindicate their period than to place themselves where the academic action is. Entering the vigorous debate over the...

 

Lydia Davis’s Method

David Trotter

The​ ‘Why I Write’ talk or essay has always seemed the most peculiar of literary subgenres, flying as it does in the face of the time-honoured and pretty much unimpeachable injunction to trust the tale not the teller. Lecturing at Berkeley in the spring of 1975, Joan Didion confessed that she had stolen the title of George Orwell’s celebrated attempt at an explanation...

At the National Gallery

Wright of Derby

Clare Bucknell

One of​ Joseph Wright of Derby’s favourite subjects was Vesuvius erupting by night, which he painted more than thirty times. The drama and peril of the scene attracted him, but he was also drawn to extreme manifestations of light and dark: lava, fire, lightning, smoke. He found that lava in particular could be difficult to paint, because it needed to look fluid, not stiff and static....

 

Adèle Yon’s ‘Mon vrai nom est Elisabeth’

Adam Mars-Jones

As Adèle Yon​ tells it in Mon vrai nom est Elisabeth, when she was eighteen she went to a party, taking with her a bag of weed. A distant cousin who was also at the party made a beeline for her, or for her stash (the two young women hadn’t spoken before). She shared it and left what remained when she went home. Somehow news of this encounter reached her grandparents, giving them...

 

Early Modern Diplomacy

Clare Jackson

Inscribed in Latin​ on a large floor slab in the chapel of Eton College is a memorial to a former provost, Sir Henry Wotton, who died, aged 71, in December 1639: ‘Here lies the first author of this sentiment: The itch of disputation is the scab of the churches. Inquire his name elsewhere.’ Izaak Walton was the first to pursue this prompt to biographical appraisal in his Reliquiae...

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

The Slow Death of Democracy

With David Runciman, Lyse Doucet, Thant Myint-U and Christopher Clark

The LRB and David Runciman’s Past Present Future podcast have assembled a panel to reflect on the state of democracy in the West and around the world. Will democracy survive as a 21st-century form of government, or are we watching it slide towards bankruptcy, first gradually, then suddenly, as Hemingway put it?

Read more about The Slow Death of Democracy
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