Mummy’s Favourite

Andrew O’Hagan

In the days​ of disco and Aramis 900, when the relationship between entitlement and sleaze could still seem novel, Prince Andrew came across like the more relatable sort of wanker, high on royal privilege but in touch with the inner life of the standard British male. ‘If he wasn’t a member of the royal family,’ the astrologer Russell Grant said, ‘his ideal role would...

Diary

Men explain Epstein to me

Susan Pedersen

I’mnot on social media, in part because the level of my rage and anxiety about American politics doesn’t need to get any higher. But I do feel obliged to keep an eye on the polity: I read the papers, go occasionally to demonstrations and, each morning, as I walk the twenty blocks from my apartment to Columbia to teach my classes, listen to news podcasts. Which means I spent the...

 

Solvej Balle’s Time Loop

Joanna Biggs

Timeis fake, and it is the realest thing there is. You can’t avoid the evidence, even if you aren’t looking: only four days in a year are 24 hours long; before the industrial revolution the weekend lasted until Tuesday; the day your mother dies is not the same length as the day you do your taxes. We have created seasons and years, adolescence and senescence, stories that take...

 

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...

 

Schubert’s​ Imagination

Nicholas Spice

Had Franz Schubert​ been asked how he had come to write the song ‘Am Meer’ – he, who had never seen the sea and whose knowledge of it was limited to hearsay and the stylised depictions of painting and literature – he might have answered as, a hundred years later, Maurice Ravel answered, when a friend teasingly asked him how, since he never got up before ten thirty, he...

 

Chantal Akerman’s Predicament

Daniella Shreir

At the age​ of fifteen, Chantal Akerman sneaked into a screening of Jean-Luc Godard’s Pierrot le fou. She was in the habit of skipping school with her friends and the cinema was one of their preferred hangout spots. But until that moment, Akerman had thought of it as a place for flirting and kissing, which were ‘the same thing as dancing’. She hadn’t heard of Godard...

At the Movies

‘Wuthering Heights’

Michael Wood

Emily Brontë’snovel,Wuthering Heights, ends in a graveyard where the narrator wonders ‘how anyone could ever imagine unquiet slumbers for the sleepers in that quiet earth’. Emerald Fennell’s film of the same name opens with a public hanging, and we wonder if things will quieten down. Is this a connection? Not really, except that both works deal in surprises,...

 

Late Soviet Spiritualism

Sheila Fitzpatrick

Remember​ perestroika? That was Mikhail Gorbachev’s ill-fated experiment in reform in the late 1980s which ended with the sudden collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. The perestroika story, as we read it in the West, was about an enlightened Soviet leader’s effort to democratise internally, while at the same time ending the Cold War. The first part failed; the second succeeded, but...

Short Cuts

Tactical Voting

William Davies

Politicalscientists and psephologists are quick to warn us not to read by-election results as proxies for national outcomes. By-elections are so often an occasion to give the incumbent party a bloody nose. Yet it did feel as if the by-election in Gorton and Denton on 26 February was telling us something, less in the probabilistic way the number-crunchers warn against, and more in an...

 

Gordon Brown Reconsidered

Andy Beckett

In August​ 2007, two months into Gordon Brown’s premiership, two-thirds of voters approved of his performance: one of the highest rates of satisfaction for any prime minister over the last twenty years. Labour was well ahead of the Conservatives in the polls. The Tory leader, David Cameron, was in a difficult phase, no longer a fresh figure after a year and a half in charge, and...

 

Communards in Exile

Neal Ascherson

Just north​ of Oxford Street, at its eastern end, a dim entry called Newman Passage curves away from the plate glass and glitz into a silent Victorian alley. Wet cobbles gleam; the narrowing walls have survived slum clearance, redevelopment and the Blitz.

In one sense, the Paris Commune of 1871 – the mightiest urban insurrection in history before the 1944 Warsaw Rising – ended...

 

Eliot on the Run

Stefan Collini

Humankind,​ he told us himself, ‘cannot bear very much reality’. One way to escape having to confront that disagreeable element was to go into hiding. For much of the second half of his life, T.S. Eliot was a man on the run, retreating to actual or symbolic boltholes, wearing a succession of masks, relying on routine to help him escape detection – even, it sometimes seemed,...

At the Norton

Rembrandt in Palm Beach

Michael Hofmann

Zbigniew Herbert​, noted lover of Golden Age Dutch painting, decided one day to break with his well-trodden pilgrimages to his favourite museums in Rotterdam and Amsterdam. Instead, he ventured into the Dutch countryside for a view of what one might call the hinterland of so many of those dim, flat, dampish paintings (the landscapes, at any rate). ‘It is reasonable,’ he contends...

 

Talk to the hand

Steven Shapin

Whatare the people in our lives really like – inside? Seeming and being may not be the same. Smiles may be false and vows of love insincere. Appearances are deceptive; you can’t tell a book by its cover; beauty is only skin deep. Yet, in ordinary circumstances, surfaces are all we have to go on. We do often infer something about books from their covers.

Physiognomy was the name...

 

Flannery O’Connor’s Judgments

Edmund Gordon

In 1936​, two very different novels about plantation culture and the Southern experience of the Civil War received verdicts from the New York Times. Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind – with its cast of gallant gentlemen and cheerful slaves – was ‘in sheer readability, surpassed by nothing in American fiction’. William Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom!...

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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