The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20130703051319/http://www.newstatesman.com:80/books
Jimmy Connors.
By Critic - 02 July 14:30

The critics' verdicts on Jimmy Connors, Jonathan Sperber and Sarah Churchwell.

Duke Ellington plays the piano at the Cotton Club in 1930.
By Sarah Churchwell - 27 June 9:41

Sarah Churchwell reviews Jazz: New York in the Roaring Twenties by Robert Nippoldt and Hans-Jürgen Schaal.

Jimmy Connors in 2012. Photograph: Getty Images
By Ed Smith - 27 June 8:41

Former tennis player Jimmy Connors' memoir has the ring of honesty, as though he is trying to be entirely straightforward.

Neville Chamberlain while Minister for Health in 1932. Photograph: Getty Images
By Vernon Bogdanor - 27 June 8:15

A detailed history of the Conservative Party's domination between the First and Second World Wars.

Out of the blue: Gaiman writes of myths and magic. Photograph: Millenium Images
By Alex Hern - 27 June 8:09

A book that feels like it’s made up of offcuts and dreams.

New Statesman
By Rachel Cusk - 22 June 10:28

One could say that the Oedipus narrative gave us Wuthering Heights where the Moses story resulted in Jane Eyre; or at least that between them can be found the spectrum of objective and subjective narrative possibilities.

A protester's shirt displays an embroidery of the Virgin Mary
By John Gray - 22 June 9:21

Sins of omission and myths of the Enlightenment.

Iain Banks.
By Helen Lewis - 20 June 11:17

Remembering Iain Banks, an intensely political writer.

New Statesman
By John Sutherland - 20 June 11:12

The loose-knittedness of Alexandria encourages Jack Hornerism. For me, the richest plums in the pudding are the digressions on Stothard’s background.

Natassja Kinski in the title role of Roman Polanski's "Tess".
By Claire Lowdon - 20 June 10:53

A book that purports “to provide readers and students with some of the basic tools of the critical trade” is chock-full of critical fallacies and flawed reasoning.

The Yorkshire town of Hebden Bridge, c.1950. Photograph: Getty Images
By Stuart Maconie - 20 June 10:47

For everyone who is exasperated by Morley’s oblique, mazy, impressionistic style, there will be others who will be seduced by its heft, even if they don’t realise quite how good it is.

A closed-down factory in Waterbury, Connecticut. Photograph: Getty Images
By Alan Ryan - 20 June 10:38

An impressive piece of work – but not a happy one.

Melanie Phillips appearing on BBC Question Time.
By Helen Lewis - 19 June 11:05

A fascinating psychological portrait of a woman who seems to feel most alive when under fire.

New Statesman
By Critic - 17 June 15:18

The critics' verdicts on Rachel Kushner, Iain Banks and Sylvain Tesson.

Asunder.
By Juliet Jacques - 17 June 14:45

Asunder communicates its ideas, and their supporting cultural references, subtly and efficiently.

A young boy reading a book.
By Jonathan Emmett - 17 June 9:43

All thirteen judges on this year's Greenaway and Carnegie Medal panel are women. Last year there was only one man. Although there are plenty of men writing and illustrating picture books, the gatekeepers in the world of picture books are overwhelmingly female. If the full range of boys' tastes aren't represented, how can we expect them to take an interest?

Tinkerbell.
By Alex Hern - 16 June 19:53

Reviewed: Peter Pan by Régis Loisel.

An Arghan policeman.
By Sherard Cowper-Cowles - 16 June 11:00

Frank Ledwidge, once a “justice adviser” in Britain’s para-colonial administration in Helmand, has produced a devastating indictment of Britain’s military intervention in southern Afghanistan. If those of us complicit in the error were ever brought to justice, he says, this would be the case for our prosecution.

A still image from Lurhmann's The Great Gatsby.
By Alexandra Harris - 16 June 10:00

Sarah Churchwell's Careless People is as mixed and inclusive as F Scott Fitzgerald’s scrapbooks. Both offer 1922 as the chief exhibit to explain the jazz age.

Portrait of James Salter.
By Kirsty Gunn - 15 June 13:00

Twenty years ago Kirsty Gunn was promoting a book about a perfect family who seemed to have everything, but whose lives were slowly falling apart. An audience member suggested she read James Salter's "Light Years". It was the beginning of a life-long love affair.

People sitting in front of laptops, some looking at the screen, others not.
By Jon Day - 15 June 12:00

In our hypermediated world, where we choose to bestow our attention has become a matter of commercial interest. Joshua Cohen, an American novelist and critic, has drawn up a history of attention in short, attention-grabbing episodes, from the dawn of writing to the encroachment of the internet over mind.

A man holds up an ancient banknote.
By Alex Brummer - 15 June 12:00

A fresh addition to the growing library of "recession lit": one which delves into anthropology and ancient history to argue we will never understand the financial crisis with our current misguided perspective on money.

Smoking: Kushner's novel features biker chick Reno.
By Leo Robson - 15 June 10:06

Rachel Kushner’s new novel bursts forth with life, anecdote and evocation. She is a writer infinitely addicted to noticing, but despite her energy and skill, the book fails to produce the required momentum.

A plate from Gray's Anatomy. Photograph: Getty Images
By Hayley Campbell - 12 June 15:57

Hayley Campbell reviews Gerald Shea's Song Without Words.

Iain Banks books.
By Chris D Allen - 10 June 13:01

Friends, readers and fellow-writers remember a Scottish literary great.

Saul Bellow in 1992.
By Leo Robson - 07 June 19:00

Greg Bellow, son of Saul Bellow and author of Saul Bellow's Heart: A Son's Memoir, on family, psychotherapy and writing.

A still from Nothingcanpossiblygowrong.com
By Cara Ellison - 07 June 17:36

A graphic novel about high school angst and killer robots? Hand it over, says Cara Ellison.

Liverpool docklands.
By Chris Mullin - 07 June 12:00

In recent years, with the help of a substantial capital injection from the EU, Liverpool has undergone a long-overdue renaissance. A friend of mine once asked the city’s former Anglican bishop David Sheppard how he explained the revival, to which Sheppard replied: “We stopped feeling sorry for ourselves.”

Latest tweets

DCSIMG
Morty Proxy This is a proxified and sanitized view of the page, visit original site.