From the next issue

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...

 

Updike Reconsidered

James Wolcott

Maybe it’s just me​, but the publication of John Updike’s selected letters, masterfully assembled and presented by James Schiff, doesn’t appear to have been the parade event that might have been expected. The reviews have been largely laudatory, marbled with tribute to Updike’s impeccable filigree, effortless versatility, unfaltering application and sleek plumage,...

 

Guns, Money and Opium

Laleh Khalili

In October​ 1961, John F. Kennedy and the entire White House press corps decamped to Fort Bragg, North Carolina, to watch US airborne forces put on a show of power. It was the president’s first foray out of the Boston-Washington DC corridor to ‘meet the people’, and in his acerbic book The Best and the Brightest, published a decade later, David Halberstam described it as...

From the blog

What Peace Dividend?

Tom Stevenson

18 February 2026

No discussion in British defence and security circles gets very far without someone mentioning the post-Cold War ‘peace dividend’. The idea that the collapse of the Soviet Union bequeathed to Western Europe safe conditions that allowed for lower military spending and higher social spending has become commonplace.

From the blog

It cannot read the human heart

Yan Ge

20 February 2026

A friend in China messaged me on WeChat. ‘What are your thoughts on the plagiarism scandal?’

‘What scandal?’ I asked.

‘How could you not know? It’s all over the internet.’ They meant the Chinese internet: in particular, social media platforms such as WeChat Moments, Weibo, RedNote and Bilibili. They sent me some links.

At the Movies

‘The Secret Agent’

Gaby Wood

In the Brazilian countryside, a man is driving in the wrong direction. It’s 1977, and he’s been on the road for three days. As his yellow Volkswagen Beetle pulls into a remote petrol station, we see what he is about to encounter: a dead body on the ground, crudely covered with cardboard.

Wagner Moura, playing the driver, clocks the body and attempts to reverse before the...

Short Cuts

Winter in Kyiv

Jen Stout

‘Dear residents! If you’re in the lift when the lights go off, don’t be scared,’ read the printed A4 sheet stuck to the inside of the rickety elevator in an apartment block on Kyiv’s left bank. ‘When the power comes back, count to ten before pressing the button.’ A ‘chaotic pressing of buttons’ might cause the lift to fail, in which case...

 

On Cristina Rivera Garza

Chris Power

In​ his essay ‘The Guilty Vicarage’, W.H. Auden wrote that the detective’s job is ‘to restore the state of grace in which the aesthetic and the ethical are as one’. Death Takes Me stands in opposition to this formula. Cristina Rivera Garza’s decision to challenge the neatness of the detective story has its roots in the murder in July 1990 of her sister,...

 

Thought Control

Jameel Jaffer

The​ US National Archives in Washington contain a letter to President Truman from a concerned citizen called Phyllis Craig, who accuses him of wanting to ‘fill our once fine country with morons and other unworthies who are here in large numbers through lax immigration laws to get all they can out of America and bring nothing but filth and self-interest’. The letter is dated 26...

 

Tudor Art

Kate Heard

Preaching​ before Edward VI and his council in June 1548, Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, reflected that ‘in my time hath come many alterations.’ Gardiner was referring to the break with Rome, the dissolution of the monasteries and the iconoclastic fervour of Edward’s reign, each of which represented a ‘great alteration’ of policy and sentiment. Further...

Diary

Bardot at the Notting Hill Coronet

Jeremy Harding

After Brigitte Bardot’s​ death in December, the editorial in Paris-Match was desolate: the country had lost ‘its wife, its daughter, its mother, its confidante … its conscience, its Marianne’; French cinema had ‘faded’, no one would again embody ‘liberty and beauty’ as she had; ‘tears will flow.’ Bardot was one of France’s...

At the Photographers’ Gallery

Boris Mikhailov’s Provocations

Brian Dillon

In photography​ the line between grace and shame is often blurred. We are apt to ask a simplifying question: are we looking at bodies exalted or abused? Things are rarely so straightforward. The Ukrainian artist Boris Mikhailov published his photographic series Case History as a book in 1999, and the following year the Photographers’ Gallery in London mounted its first retrospective of...

 

The Dangerous Dead

Mike Jay

The​ word ‘vampire’ entered common parlance in the Anglophone world in 1732, as sensational reports arrived via German newspapers about an episode on the Serbian front in the wars between the Habsburg and Ottoman empires. A soldier called Arnaut Pavle had died after breaking his neck falling from a hay wagon. It was said that he had been troubled by vampires throughout his life...

 

Archimedes on the Beach

Claire Hall

Lot​ 9058, a damp-stained and mildewed medieval Greek liturgical book, went up for auction at Christie’s in New York on 29 October 1998. It was embroiled in controversy: the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem had already brought an injunction against Christie’s, claiming the book had been stolen from a monastery in Constantinople during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire....

 

Character Types

Colin Burrow

What do we mean​ when we call someone a ‘character’? It’s often a way of indicating that a person habitually says or does things that most people wouldn’t say or do. It might be that the character makes risqué jokes, or that he likes to abseil down tall buildings while wearing a pink Spider-Man costume, or that he’s actually just a pain in the arse. My...

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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