LRB Cover
Volume 31 Number 23
3 December 2009

BLOG

27 November 2009

Jim Holt

Another Byron Foresaw

27 November 2009

Jeremy Bernstein

Has his identity stolen

26 November 2009

Christopher Tayler

James Ellroy's Bad Habits

MOST READ

19 November 2009

John Gray

Keynes

19 November 2009

Slavoj Žižek

Neo-Anti-Communism

19 November 2009

Michael Wood

Barthes

In the next issue, which will be dated 17 December, James Wood on Lermontov, postponed from this issue and the one before, but a dead cert for the next, we’re told.

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Rebecca Solnit

The Water Problem

Junk science might be too generous a label for the way conclusions have been reached about the water of the Colorado River. Without it, Arizona and southern Nevada would still be barely populated and a lot of the agriculture in the South-West wouldn’t exist. But the supply was always precarious and overcommitted, and it is already running out. More

Michael Wood

T.S. Eliot’s Letters

Eliot was working full-time at Lloyds Bank, where he stayed until 1925, and editing the Criterion in the spare moments he didn’t have. This tale of time swallowed up, what Eliot calls ‘the prison-like limitation of my time’, is one of the two chief themes of the second volume of the Letters. The other is the competitive invalidism the Eliots have instead of a marriage. More

Colin Kidd

Vandals in Bow Ties

David Cameron risks reviving the distinction between the deserving and undeserving poor, which was hard enough to take when uttered by Conservatives who had risen from the lower middle class, like Margaret Thatcher or Norman Tebbit, but is impossible to swallow from Cameron and other graduates of Oxford’s Bullingdon Club, who carry out acts of vandalism dressed in bow tie and tails. More

Short Cuts
Colin Dayan

At the National Gallery
Peter Campbell

FROM THE ARCHIVE