Diary: Bad Captains

Rachel Kushner, 22 January 2015

A few hours after the 17-deck Costa Concordia set sail, Captain Schettino gave an order for the ship to slow down so that he could enjoy to the full his dessert.

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I have no books to consult: Lord Mansfield

Stephen Sedley, 22 January 2015

In March​ 1718, 13-year-old William Murray, the 11th of Viscount Stormont’s 14 children, set off from the family seat at Scone, near Perth, on a pony. The journey to London, which he made...

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Into the Underworld: The Hackney Underworld

Iain Sinclair, 22 January 2015

When the surface of the world is so overloaded with competing narratives there is an understandable impulse to go underground.

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Let’s to billiards: Constant Lambert

Stephen Walsh, 22 January 2015

Constant Lambert​ is a composer one would like to have met. This has nothing in particular to do with the quality of his music, though he was a much better composer than you might deduce from...

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Doris and Me

Jenny Diski, 8 January 2015

More important than all the theory, behind and beyond it, there was some ineffable taste or intuitive understanding implicitly agreed on by these talking, always talking, people.

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The Lives of Ronald Pinn

Andrew O’Hagan, 8 January 2015

Could I take a dead young man’s name and see how far I could go in animating a fake life for him?

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Diary: What I did in 2014

Alan Bennett, 8 January 2015

‘It’s great,’ says Daniel, ‘that you can still piss people off however old you are.’

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Diary: Death and Photography

John Burnside, 18 December 2014

I am waiting​ for a plane at Newark. Time was when anywhere in an airport was a good place to read, or just to go slack and empty, to be nobody in particular and, by that token, more...

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By All Possible Art: George Herbert

Tobias Gregory, 18 December 2014

For​ the gospel message to come as good news, one must first be convinced of some really bad news. This bad news is not obvious, and the devout must work hard to keep it vivid in the minds of...

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The Screaming Gynaecologist

Jenny Diski, 4 December 2014

After​ waiting that long week for the results of my post-chemo scan, the answer to the hovering question about the effect it had on the tumour in my lung and the affected lymph nodes was much...

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The life of Franz Kafka reads like a truly great comedy in the tradition of Blackadder.

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Agh, Agh, Yah, Boo: Ian Hamilton Finlay

David Wheatley, 4 December 2014

Writing​ to his friend Stephen Bann, then a graduate student, in 1964, Ian Hamilton Finlay outlined his plans to treat readers of his brash new journal, Poor. Old. Tired. Horse, to a free...

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Diary: Dad’s Apology

Adam Mars-Jones, 20 November 2014

My father​’s background in congregationalist Denbighshire was teetotalitarian: his own father took only one alcoholic drink in his life, and that was (fair play) a glass of champagne at...

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To spend time​ with Tennessee Williams – for months on end in the case of Elia Kazan, the director who put his plays on the stage in the 1940s and 1950s; 12 years in the case of his...

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West End Boy: Breivik & Co

Adam Shatz, 20 November 2014

Before he went on his mass killing spree in 2011, Anders Behring Breivik was a regular at the Palace Grill in Oslo West.

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Punk Counterpunk

Bee Wilson, 20 November 2014

Some time in 1979, after the death of Sid Vicious and before the enthronement of Margaret Thatcher, Vivienne Westwood ‘lost interest’ in punk.

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Don’t be dull: Heroin

Miranda Critchley, 6 November 2014

Michael Clune​ first took heroin in July 1997. Afterwards, he lay on the roof of his friend Chip’s New York apartment: A single cloud moved through the blue sky … My eye was a...

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Tick.​ The final infusion of the three 21-day cycles of chemo is done. I’ve been of a mind to follow Alan Bennett’s excellent observation that he doesn’t wish to be so...

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