With the death of Rose Gray at the age of 71 on February 28th, British gastronomy has lost one of its most influential figures (from More Intelligent Life)
In his book "Dining with al-Qaeda: Three Decades Exploring the Many Worlds of the Middle East", Hugh Pope tries to tell it how it is
Michael Foot, politician and man of letters, died on March 3rd, aged 96
If females must compete, evolution will furnish them with weapons to do so
A reporter who explored China’s bigger and lesser roads and found treasure
Irving Penn photographed nearly every mover and shaker of the 20th century. A survey of his portraits reveals why they trusted him, writes Helena Douglas ... More»
William Kentridge's unique staging of "The Nose", Shostakovich's take on Gogol's grimly absurd story, premieres at New York's Metropolitan Opera. Vivien Schweitzer talks to the artist about his work ... More»
As debates rage about how financial markets should be changed, some insiders are hearkening back to a simpler time for traders. With “Day One Trader”, Sussex has offered a tribute to this old-school method of trading that once dominated derivatives and securities exchanges around the world... More»
In the first in a continuing series, our books and arts editor considers four of our favourite books from this month... More»
A demolition of Hank Paulson's memoir
A critic huffs that Paulson sounds tough but was in fact all too weak
New Republic
A book that defends plagiarism, champions faked memoirs and declares fiction dead has the literary world up in arms
Salon
The trade paper fires its two top critics, moving to freelance reviews
Los Angeles Times
The late choreographer's dance company embarks on a final tour before disbanding
Wall Street Journal
"[T]his poor sap of a show feels as eager to be walloped as a clown in a carnival dunking booth."
~ Ben Brantley on "Love Never Dies", Andrew Lloyd Webber's sequal to "The Phantom of the Opera", "Same Phantom, different spirit" (New York Times
A review of "The End of the Party: the Rise and Fall of New Labour", a political vivisection by Andrew Rawnsley More»
Philip Walter Archer, patriarch of Ambridge, died on February 12th, aged 81 More»
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Courses that are meant to give a broad intellectual perspective to undergraduates ought not be taught by PhDs... More»
Having driven over 70,000km in China's countryside, I can attest that there is no better way (short of walking or bicycling) to get to know China... More»
The great books are (were) read because they are great. Nowadays one can specialize in lesbian or Afro-Caribbean studies and be considered a candidate for a PhD... More»
The Chinese people seem to be behind much of the worst practices in animal cruelty. Chinese traditional medicine kills hundreds of rhinos and tigers for quack cures for headaches and erectile dysfunction... More»
Animal rights are not a natural intrinsic principle, but a construct of modern wealth. We should refrain from imposing our cultural desires on another culture... More»