The Spectator is Britain’s oldest and most influential magazine, with incisive political and economic analysis, unrivalled books and arts reviews, and unmissable lifestyle writing, plus the funniest cartoons. It’s more cocktail party than political party, and we’d love it if you joined us.
Don’t move Mahmood
The Spectator
CONTRIBUTORS
PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
DIARY
The wrong lessons from a murder
THE SPECTATOR’S NOTES
Burnham begins • The plans for his first ten days
Signature
BAROMETER
Two-tier mourning
Smooth sailing • Christopher Nolan’s Odyssey is a triumph
Sick of it • Disability should not be aspirational
Soul sisters • Are you enjoying a ‘nun girl summer’?
Bring back the nasty party
Wild ambitions • Turtle doves and the myth of rewilding
Funny business • Social media has saved comedy
Virtue reality • Wales’s mad policy of decolonisation
LETTERS
Binface has shown Burnham how to make a manifesto
BOOKS & ARTS
Mission impossible • Jonathan Sumption traces the course of the disastrous Fifth Crusade
Pushing the boundaries
Parisian vignettes
Erik Satie is Alone
A portrait of the artist
Buried in the bog
Radical chic
Crime fiction • The Germans are coming
The siege and the journey
Ballet royale • Rupert Christiansen on Britain’s most unabashedly elitist school
Worst in show
Haydn seek
Cinema Troy story
Remembrance of things past
Uncivil partnership
Original sin
Panini stickers
No life
Sophia Money-Coutts
Catriona Olding
Tanya Gold
Naroditsky Memorial
Resignation
2761: Alphabetical Jigsaw
Hello, Mr Chips
DEAR MARY YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
SPECTATOR WINE
Call yourselves football fans?
The Battle for Britain
When in doubt, follow the money
Farage’s fear
Restore resurgent
Vanishingly unlikely