August 10, 2020
Don’t call Abingdon ordinary It has been a place of innovation ever since Æthelwold marked out his millstream
Eleanor Parker
07.08
Why Britain needs a peasants’ revolt To become more self-sufficient, we must listen to William Cobbett and his dream of a 'Brave Old World'
John Lewis-Stempel
06.08
Why Stamford said no to modernity The Lincolnshire town may be stuck in the past — but is that really such a bad thing?
Mary Harrington
05.08
Jack Charlton’s vanished world In a town where miners were 'aristocrats of labour' and working men's clubs were luxurious, a pair of football stars were born
Dan Jackson
04.08
Where England sinks into the sea The strange and shifting history of Dungeness resonates with our modern dilemmas
Niall Gooch
03.08
The village that imagined a godless world In the Dorset parish of Chaldon Herring, 20th century intellectuals imagined a philosophy beyond Christianity
John Gray
06.03
How kids’ books became universally woke Progressivism is the latest religion, and the children's publishing industry is cashing in
Ed West
06.03
What should I read my son? The powerful forces of gender-specific marketing steer boys towards dinosaur, truck and superhero literature
Tanya Gold
05.03
In praise of uncynical children’s books Misanthropic tales may thrill kids, but it’s just nicer, sometimes, to read books by people who like people
Tom Chivers
04.03
The joyful anachronism of kid lit Reading is a form of time-travel which allows folk memories to thrive
Sam Leith
03.03
Why are children’s books so ugly? The state of illustrated kids' books makes one thing clear: we do not value beauty
Mary Harrington
14.02
What’s the point of sex? Males are a liability, this is why females put up with them
Peter Franklin