LRB Cover
Volume 39 Number 17
7 September 2017

LRB blog 30 August 2017

Thomas Jones
How To Be Topp

29 August 2017

Kaya Genç
On the Sleeper

25 August 2017

Gwen Burnyeat
Demobilisation in Llano Grande

MOST READ

21 February 2013

Hilary Mantel
Royal Bodies

18 March 1999

Alan Hollinghurst
Diary

26 March 1992

Richard Mayne
Seven Euro-Heresies

In the next issue, which will be dated 21 September, Mary-Kay Wilmers will write about John Sturrock, the LRB’s consulting editor since 1993, who died on 14 August. Also in that issue, David Thomson on Ken Burns’s 18-hour film about the Vietnam War.

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Malise Ruthven

The Saudi Trillions

It made perfect sense that the first port of call on President Trump’s first foreign trip, in May, was Riyadh. Saudi Arabia – the world’s second largest oil producer (after Russia), the world’s biggest military spender as a proportion of GDP, the main sponsor of Islamist fighting groups across Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria and Iraq, the leader of a coalition in a devastating war against Yemeni rebels now in its third year – is a country one can do business with, even as the most ardent Kremlinologists in the West struggle to understand it. More

Colm Tóibín

In Barcelona

All the way up towards Plaça de Catalunya, on the route the van had taken, were shrines placed where people had been killed. The first one, at the very top, opposite Bar Núria, marks the spot where the van had come onto the pedestrian boulevard. Among the candles and the flowers and the handwritten messages was a brand new edition of the Collected Poems of Federico García Lorca in Spanish. Lorca, who came to Barcelona first in 1925, said that the Ramblas was a street he hoped would go on for ever. More


Rosemary Hill

Charles and Camilla

His twenties were probably the most successful decade in terms of public perception. Young, good-looking and rich in his own right with the income from the Duchy of Cornwall, he could, from a certain point of view, be seen as a prince for the swinging 1960s. After that the biographies chronicle a succession of increasingly difficult milestones. As he faced his 30th birthday he addressed the Cambridge Union in hair-raisingly ingenuous terms: ‘My great problem in life is that I do not really know what my role in life is.’ None of the journalists he complained about could have said anything more undermining. More

Amia Srinivasan

What’s it like to be an octopus?

Octopuses – and to some extent their cephalopod cousins, cuttlefish and squid – frustrate the neat evolutionary division between clever vertebrates and simple-minded invertebrates. They are sophisticated problem solvers; they learn, and can use tools; and they show a capacity for mimicry, deception and, some think, humour. Just how refined their abilities are is a matter of scientific debate: their very strangeness makes octopuses hard to study. Their intelligence is like ours, and utterly unlike ours. Octopuses are the closest we can come, on earth, to knowing what it might be like to encounter intelligent aliens. More

At Tate Britain
Brian Dillon

In Kisumu
Tristan McConnell


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