LRB Cover
Volume 35 Number 10
23 May 2013

LRB blog 17 May 2013

Laura Soar
Detritus from the Audio Sphere

16 May 2013

David Patrikarakos
Rafsanjani’s Presidential Bid

15 May 2013

Simon Childs
Newcastle University ♥ Adidas

MOST READ

25 April 2013

Ross McKibbin
Who benefits?

25 October 2012

Emily Witt
Online Dating

8 October 1992

Wynne Godley
Maastricht and All That

In the next issue, which will be dated 6 June, a report from Germany by Neal Ascherson, Patrick Cockburn on the escalating war in the Middle East, David Runciman on Charles Moore’s biography of Thatcher, Nicholas Penny on Titian, Sheila Heti on modernist heroines and Christian Lorentzen on Alice Munro.

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Thomas Jones

How to Survive Climate Change

On a damp, chill, blustery August afternoon in Whitby a few years ago I overheard a disgruntled holidaymaker declaiming – to his family, to anyone who would listen, to the wind – that ‘global warming is a load of codswallop.’ One of his children, a boy of around ten, was valiantly trying to explain to him the difference between climate and weather. But he wasn’t paying attention, or couldn’t hear over the gale and the sound of his own voice. ‘Global warming,’ he insisted again, ‘is a load of codswallop.’ This year’s April snows provoked similar sentiments in many quarters. More

Mike Jay

Memorylessness

Memory creates our identity, but it also exposes the illusion of a coherent self: a memory is not a thing but an act that alters and rearranges even as it retrieves. Although some of its operations can be trained to an astonishing pitch, most take place autonomously, beyond the reach of the conscious mind. As we age, it distorts and foreshortens: present experience becomes harder to impress on the mind, and the long-forgotten past seems to draw closer; University Challenge gets easier, remembering what you came downstairs for gets harder. More


Emily Witt

Claire Messud’s Spinster

The narrator of The Woman Upstairs is Nora Eldridge, and from the start she describes herself as something of a non-entity. ‘I’m neither fat nor thin, tall nor short, blonde nor brunette, neither pretty nor plain.’ She’s 42 and ‘neither married nor divorced, but single. What they used to call a spinster, but don’t anymore, because it implies that you’re dried up and none of us wants to be that.’ Spinsters, in the old novels, are sexless, meddlesome and prissy. These days, what they used to call a spinster is a fearsome spectre, someone to avoid. More

Pooja Bhatia

What Happened to Haiti

In January 2010, Jonathan Katz was working in Haiti for the Associated Press, the only American news organisation with a permanent bureau there. Other foreign journalists lived there, and a few more flew in for elections and catastrophes, but for the most part Haiti coverage had become a casualty of slashed budgets at dying newspapers and magazines. Covering a small, destitute island no longer made economic sense. It was a tough gig for a freelancer, owing to the high cost of living and the necessity of speaking Creole, or hiring a translator. More

Short Cuts
John Lanchester

At the Whitechapel
Rosemary Hill


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