Short Cuts: Flashman

Thomas Jones, 9 May 2002

It’s hard to imagine anyone settling down to write the further adventures of that Harry Potter of the 1830s, Tom Brown; even harder to imagine anyone settling down to read them. (Thomas...

Read more about Short Cuts: Flashman

Almost every North American museum of art today includes a gallery of modern and contemporary work, and little separates the colonial furniture, the Romantic waterfall and the careworn Rodin nude...

Read more about At the Palazzo Venier: Peggy Guggenheim’s Eye

Showboating: George Carman

John Upton, 9 May 2002

George Carman QC, the best known British advocate of his time, died of cancer on 2 January last year. Shortly afterwards, the Daily Telegraph published an obituary which listed the famous...

Read more about Showboating: George Carman

There must be people who, during their lifetime, get their minds right enough not to feel bitterness as the end looms and they realise that nothing much else is going to happen to them apart from...

Read more about Don’t think about it: The Trouble with Sonia Orwell

A new history of the British Empire might be expected to concern itself with such issues as the construction of military dictatorship through the imposition of martial law; the violent seizure...

Read more about Shoot them to be sure: The Oxford History of the British Empire

All My Truth: Henry James Memoirs

Richard Poirier, 25 April 2002

Published in 1913, when Henry James was 70, A Small Boy and Others is the first of three late volumes that taken together have sometimes been called the ‘autobiography’ of Henry...

Read more about All My Truth: Henry James Memoirs

So Much to Hate: Rudyard Bloody Kipling

Bernard Porter, 25 April 2002

Kipling is an easy man to dislike. He wasn’t much loved in his own time, apparently, even by people – schoolmates, for example, and neighbours in Vermont – with whom he thought...

Read more about So Much to Hate: Rudyard Bloody Kipling

Megaton Man: The Original Dr Strangelove

Steven Shapin, 25 April 2002

The risk of being blinded was thought to be very real, so the witnesses to the first atomic explosion at Alamogordo, New Mexico in July 1945 were given strict instructions to turn their backs on...

Read more about Megaton Man: The Original Dr Strangelove

Short Cuts: The Evil List

John Sturrock, 25 April 2002

Living as we do in the Land of the League Table, there’s sadly little call to be surprised by the appearance of what some will see as a prosopographical breakthrough: a book confidently...

Read more about Short Cuts: The Evil List

In my nursery school nativity play, the Christmas before I turned five, I was cast as the narrator. My role involved sitting on a set of steps to one side of the stage in Silchester village hall,...

Read more about Liquid Fiction: ‘The Child that Books Built’

Edward Stobart owns the largest independent haulage firm in Britain. A stammering farm child who hated school and left without paper qualifications, he worked all hours to set up his company,...

Read more about What do you do with them? Eddie Stobart

Short Cuts: military intelligence

Thomas Jones, 4 April 2002

In his review of Joseph Persico’s book about FDR and spying in World War Two (see pages 19-20 of this issue), R.W. Johnson mentions the Cicero Affair, the leak from the British Embassy in...

Read more about Short Cuts: military intelligence

Louise Bourgeois is one of the two pre-eminent sculptors working today; the other is Richard Serra, whose sculpture – single-minded, monolithic, public – offers the most striking...

Read more about Don’t you cut your lunch up when you’re ready to eat it? Louise Bourgeois

If you’re a woman – and a woman haunted by feelings of cowardice – it’s hard to know where to stand with all of this. You regret the appalling, absurd waste of life. You excoriate the madness of...

Read more about Courage, mon amie: Disquiet on the Western Front

Diary: The Late Jonas Savimbi

Jeremy Harding, 21 March 2002

The sight of a man in fatigues stalking around a poor country is guaranteed to arouse the interest of ideologues in richer ones, whatever their persuasion. Yet the recent ‘martyrdom’...

Read more about Diary: The Late Jonas Savimbi

Andy Paperbag: Andy Warhol

Hal Foster, 21 March 2002

In his account of late capitalism Fredric Jameson describes its cultural logic as if it were a schizophrenic – broken in language, amnesiac about history, in thrall to glossy images, subject...

Read more about Andy Paperbag: Andy Warhol

Neil Kinnock is a problematic figure in modern British politics. He was leader of the Labour Party for nine years and presided over a number of profound changes in both its structure and its...

Read more about The Luck of the Tories: The Debt to Kinnock

On 28 May 1919, the residents of Moscow woke to find that the walls of the Strastnoi convent had been daubed with what at first glance might have appeared to be crude blasphemous slogans. More...

Read more about I’m with the Imaginists: the memoirs of an early Soviet poet