Larry McMurtry’s American West

J. Robert Lennon

For many years​ I held certain assumptions about Larry McMurtry. Without ever having read his novels, I thought of him as a prolific – perhaps excessively prolific – author of sentimental bestsellers, most of them sequels or prequels to earlier successes. I knew that a few good movies had been adapted from his work, but had mentally classified him alongside Sidney Sheldon,...

 

Bonfire of the Universities

Stefan Collini

Britain’s​ ‘world-leading’ university system is in deep trouble. There are, inevitably, conflicting diagnoses of the malady, but the indicators of deteriorating health are too ubiquitous to be ignored. When a substantial number of universities are in serious financial jeopardy, with some hinting at possible bankruptcy in the short term (according to the Office for Students,...

From the archive

Why do we admire Jane Austen?

Barbara Everett

‘The Janeites’ must be Kipling’s least popular story (though there is competition). Written in 1924 and published in Debits and Credits two years later, it is an abrupt, allusive yarn about a group of English officers and men in northern France near the end of the First World War; and it is narrated by one of them, a large working-class innocent called Humberstall, in peacetime a hairdresser. An alcoholic young lieutenant, Macklin, arrives in the battery and starts up a Jane Austen Society. Its effects embrace even the bewildered Humberstall – they save his life. The battery is wiped out by enemy action. Humberstall staggers shell-shocked away, muttering about Miss Bates, and finds the name acts like a password on a bookish senior nurse, who hauls him aboard a packed hospital train. Looking back years later, the still dazed narrator remembers his time as a Janeite as the happiest of his life.’

 

Gamification

David Runciman

Like many millions​ of people, I usually begin my morning doing a few gentle word puzzles on newspaper websites: Connections and Strands in the New York Times, Polygon and Codeword in the Times, plus a couple of others. I do it strictly by the clock so it doesn’t take more than fifteen minutes, and I don’t take it very seriously – I have till now resisted the endless...

From the blog

Get Your Jabs

Edna Bonhomme

8 June 2026

Among the unvaccinated, one in five people who get measles in the US will be hospitalised; one in twenty children will get pneumonia; one in a thousand will develop encephalitis, which can lead to blindness, hearing impairment and other disabilities; and one in a thousand will die. Measles can also lead to immune amnesia: that is, the virus can erase the body’s memory of how to fight all the pathogens it has previously encountered.

 

Versions of the Sahara

Rahmane Idrissa

More than two-thirds​ of the Earth’s surface is covered in sea water. The gigantic archipelagos we call continents consist of 33 per cent desert, 25 per cent mountain and 30 per cent forest. The forested area has been much reduced over the last two thousand years, and in a matter of decades we have shown ourselves capable of melting polar and alpine glaciers and destroying marine...

 

Illuminated Psalms

Ardis Butterfield

The Winchester Bible (c.1150-80).

‘Apsalm consoles the sad, restrains the joyful, tempers the angry, refreshes the poor and chides the rich man to know himself,’ wrote Niceta of Remesiana, a fourth-century bishop from what is now Serbia. His far better-known contemporary Augustine of Hippo praised the psalms in more flamboyant terms:

How loudly I cried out to you, my God, as I...

 

What Russians Want

Greg Afinogenov

Across Europe​, military leaders are dreaming of war with Russia. Nato’s defence chief, Giuseppe Cavo Dragone, has called for a pre-emptive, ‘defensive’ strike (whatever that means); the German defence minister, Boris Pistorius, said in the autumn that it might have been ‘the last summer of peace for Europeans’. France’s chief of the defence staff, Fabien...

 

Gold Rush

Claire Wilmot

The road​ that leads to the city of Shire, the centre of Ethiopia’s gold rush, is pockmarked and warped. My driver told me the origins of each fissure: a drone strike here, an artillery shell there. He was stationed near Shire during the recent war, as a soldier with the Tigray Defence Forces, the popular army that rose up in 2020. All the seatbelts in his car had been cut off and...

 

‘The Effingers’

Michael Hofmann

I’mguessing that The Effingers is a roman fleuve – one of those plotty, fast-moving books, not overburdened with inwardness, that might have set Virginia Woolf’s teeth on edge. I say I guess because I don’t think I’ve read one before. I haven’t read Alex Haley, whose Roots is advertised on the back of my old German edition of The Effingers; or Lion...

 

Labour in Scotland

Rory Scothorne

Some Labour MPs​ always had their doubts about the 1998 Scotland Act. According to Tom Harris, former Labour MP for Glasgow South, there was a joke in the Commons tearoom: ‘Line 1, between “there shall” and “be a Scottish Parliament”, insert “not”.’ Since the inception of the Scottish Parliament, Labour’s number of seats has dropped in...

 

Ramsay MacDonald’s Mistakes

Malcolm Petrie

It looks like​ Britain’s long-standing electoral duopoly is coming to an end. Even though Labour won a huge majority in the 2024 general election, the combined vote share of the two main parties dropped below 60 per cent, the lowest on record. The two-party system we have been used to emerged in the first quarter of the 20th century, a consequence primarily of the growing electoral...

 

Agnès Varda’s Fruit Salad

Lili Owen Rowlands

In 1971 Agnès Varda directed an advertisement for Tupperware called ‘Who’s that woman?’ The woman in question has a pixie cut and wears a safari suit; she skips along the pavement, shepherds her children into a Renault and slings an enormous naval bag over her shoulder. There are classic Varda flourishes – sumptuous colour, exuberant cuts synced to the music...

 

Will Newsom run?

Deborah Friedell

The Gettys​ were one of the richest families in the world, and Gavin Newsom’s father was their ‘consigliere’. In 1973, when John Paul Getty III was kidnapped by the Calabrian mafia, it fell to Bill Newsom to fly to Italy to get him back. At first he suspected that his godson – ‘Little Paul’, a trust fund kid locked out of his trust – might have...

 

James Bryce’s Liberalism

Jonathan Parry

If historians​ are remembered posthumously, it tends to be for their book titles, while the books themselves gather dust. James Bryce is mostly known today for his surveys of two of history’s great federations: The Holy Roman Empire and The American Commonwealth. He admired both. In some quarters, he retains a more substantial reputation, as a powerful advocate of Anglo-American...

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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