America’s Afghanistan Delusion

Tom Stevenson

The United States​ brought the war on terror to practically every part of the world – landing military advisers on the Sulu archipelago in the Philippines, operating black sites in Poland and Romania, filling the cages of Guantánamo Bay. But the challenge to American power presented by the 11 September attacks came from a particular region: what Adam Garfinkle, a future...

Short Cuts

Labour’s Failure

James Butler

People​ vote irrationally in local elections, at least according to the standards of political scientists. That is, their vote is often motivated by factors outside the purview of local government. The dismal result for Labour in England’s local elections on 7 May was not predominantly a revolt over bin collections. It was strongly related to national revulsion for Labour, and to the...

 

On Marlen Haushofer

Becca Rothfeld

Marlen Haushofer’s​ masterpiece, The Wall (1963), opens with the cessation of time, at least as humans mark and measure it. ‘Today, the fifth of November, I shall begin my report,’ the narrator writes, before correcting herself: ‘I don’t even know if today is really the fifth of November. Over the course of the past winter I’ve lost track of a few...

 

Baltic Snake Cults

Diarmaid MacCulloch

Around​ the chilly shores of the Baltic, for nine hundred years from the ninth century, a succession of Dark Age monks, Franciscan friars, Reformed or Lutheran Protestant pastors and Jesuits ruefully recalled that in the Garden of Eden ‘the serpent was more subtil than any beast of the field which the Lord God had made’ (Genesis 3:1). During this first biblical stage of its...

 

Should we punish?

Thomas Nagel

The appearance​ of a new ethical theory is a rare event, but it happened in 1982 with the publication of T.M. Scanlon’s essay ‘Contractualism and Utilitarianism’. Although he called his theory contractualism, Scanlon does not postulate an actual social contract between the members of a society, like Hobbes, or a hypothetical contract under imaginary conditions, like Rawls....

 

Where’s all the cash?

John Lanchester

Ican’tremember the last time I used cash. My bank statements show that I haven’t made a withdrawal from a cashpoint in the last twelve months. That’s just as well, since it’s significantly more of an effort to get hold of cash than it used to be. Before the pandemic, there were seven cashpoints within a five-minute walk from my house. All of them have now gone: the...

 

Egypt under the Ptolemies

Robert Cioffi

In​ the late summer of 30 bce, months after defeating Antony and Cleopatra at the Battle of Actium, Octavian entered Alexandria, meeting little resistance. Like Caesar before him, he visited the tomb of Alexander the Great. The golden sarcophagus was opened and Octavian adorned the mummified corpse with flowers and a gold crown (according to one source, he accidentally broke off a piece of...

 

Lynette Roberts holds firm

Emily Berry

It’sa sorry situation when the most repeated fact about someone’s life is that a famous person was best man at their wedding. Dylan Thomas did the honours for Lynette Roberts and her groom in 1939, wearing a ‘smart brown suit’ he borrowed for the occasion. ‘I carried wild flowers and gave Dylan a bunchful of wild flowers for his lapel,’ Roberts recalled....

 

George Saunders’s ‘Vigil’

Adam Mars-Jones

George Saunders’s​ novel Lincoln in the Bardo, which won the Booker Prize in 2017, featured a cast who were mostly dead, though still conversational, and his new novel, Vigil, revisits the device – one that goes back in American literature at least as far as 1915 and Edgar Lee Masters’s poetry collection Spoon River Anthology. In that book a town’s dead inhabitants...

 

Slavery in the Islamic World

Youssef Ben Ismail

In​ 2012 the 96-year-old Bernard Lewis went on American radio to promote his book Notes on a Century: Reflections of a Middle East Historian. Neal Conan, the host of NPR’s Talk of the Nation, introduced him as a man unafraid of sensitive subjects and invited listeners to call in with questions about ‘taboos’ in Middle Eastern history. Conan asked whether race and slavery...

 

Amie Barrodale’s ‘Trip’

Nicole Flattery

In John Cheever’sBullet Park (1969), Eliot Nailles, a mild-mannered advertising executive, is asked by an Italian doctor: ‘Why do Americans want to be immortal?’ Amie Barrodale’s first novel, Trip, offers a playful reformulation of this question. In some ways, it’s a send-up of a culture obsessed with ‘healthmaxxing’, where ageing and death are...

At the Movies

‘The Stranger’

Michael Wood

At the end​ of François Ozon’s film The Stranger, the narrator and hero makes a remarkable speech. He does the same, verbatim, in Luchino Visconti’s 1967 movie, and in Albert Camus’s novel L’Étranger, on which both films are based. But it means something different in each case and so becomes a sort of test or touchstone for the viewer or reader. A man...

 

Samurai Suits

Ben Walker

In​ 1598, shortly before his death, the Japanese leader, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, established the Council of Five Elders, a group of daimyo (feudal lords) who would govern until his son Hideyori came of age. It took just two years for one of the five, Tokugawa Ieyasu, to oust the seven-year-old ruler and unify Japan under his own banner. The Tokugawa shogunate governed Japan for the next 250...

 

Æthelstan’s Reign

Nicholas Higham

The British​ royal family traces its descent from the Norman Conquest; the numbering of monarchs dates from 1066. That Charles III’s great-uncle was the eighth King Edward, for instance, ignores Edward the Confessor, despite William the Conqueror claiming the throne as his kinsman as well as by his royal gift. From this perspective, the kingdom of England began in 1066. In other...

Diary

Memories of Harrison Starr

Alex Cocotas

The movie producer​, cinematographer and screenwriter Harrison Starr died in 2024 at the age of 95. Almost no one noticed. If his name was ever mentioned it was usually in connection with those of more famous collaborators. He was the producer of Michelangelo Antonioni’s legendary flop Zabriskie Point, which came out in 1970, and the year before he made a cameo appearance in Kurt...

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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