LRB Cover
Volume 40 Number 01
4 January 2018

LRB blog 22 December 2017

Jeremy Harding
reports from Lesbos

21 December 2017

Francis FitzGibbon
Lawyers v. Their Clients

21 December 2017

Roy Mayall
Third-Class Post

MOST READ

14 December 2017

Eric Foner
After Hamilton

15 September 1988

Paul Foot
The great times they could have had

6 October 1983

John Sutherland
Star Warrior

In the next issue, which will be dated 25 January, Lorna Finlayson on Catharine MacKinnon, Colm Tóibín on Yeats’s father, T.J. Clark on Cézanne’s portraits.

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Alan Bennett

Diary

10 July. It occurs to me, that tedious though Love Island is, it has immensely respectable origins, indeed the best. It is after all Bloomsbury (though whether in the person of G.E. Moore, E.M. Forster or the sainted Virginia herself I’m not sure), whose motto was ‘personal relations for ever and ever’, which, lolling about on the sun-baked lawns, these gorgeous creatures are indeed subscribing to (and possibly finding wanting). Walberswick was always thought to be Bloomsbury on Sea, but its ultimate location could now claim to be Love Island. (World’s smallest facility: the Love Island Library.) More

Patricia Lockwood

Joan Didion’s Pointillism

The present literature about her is a hagiography that does not entirely trust itself; there is a vacancy at the centre of it that I call the ‘but surely’. But surely if these essays were published now, the hagiography says to itself at three in the morning, they would meet with a different reception? But surely if she wrote today, her ideas about feminism would be more in line with ours? But surely, for all her pointillism, she is failing to draw the conclusions we would most like to see? The hagiography turns the pillow over, looking for a cool spot. How much can we really rely on someone who loved The Doors? More


Jackson Lears

#Russiagate

We can gauge the corrosive impact of the Democrats’ fixation on Russia by asking what they aren’t talking about when they talk about Russian hacking. For a start, they aren’t talking about interference of other sorts in the election, such as the Republican Party’s many means of disenfranchising minority voters. Nor are they talking about the trillion dollar defence budget that pre-empts the possibility of single-payer healthcare and other urgently needed social programmes; nor about the modernisation of the American nuclear arsenal, which raises the risk of the ultimate environmental calamity, nuclear war. More

Ferdinand Mount

Princess Margaret

Only the hardest heart would repress a twitch of sympathy. To live on the receiving end of so much gush and so much abuse, to be simultaneously spoilt rotten and hopelessly infantilised, how well would any of us stand up to it? So many functions to go to, so much dysfunction to come back to. When Princess Margaret made a guest appearance at the Borsetshire fashion show in an episode of The Archers, the producer said after the run-through: ‘That’s very good, ma’am, but do you think you could sound as if you were enjoying yourself a little more?’ ‘Well, I wouldn’t be, would I?’ the princess replied. More

At the Barbican
Saul Nelson

Short Cuts
Inigo Thomas


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