British Raj
Nostalgic fantasies of the British Raj
Shattered Lands: Five
Partitions and the Making of Modern
Asia by Sam Dalrymple; e Indian
Caliphate: Exiled Ottomans and the
Billionaire Prince by Imran Mulla
Most Read
Gary Stevenson is wrong about wealth taxes
The popular economist is irritating, but more importantly he is mistaken
Why they hated Ann Widdecombe
Fair-minded people could agree or disagree with her opinions. Left-wing bigots hated her for not abandoning them
Solent mean
Solent PhD student frozen out after introducing Roger Scruton into seminar
Night of the big bins
How Count Binface changed the face of Britain forever
An anti-gambling bonanza
Don’t expect a lot of objective and thorough research from a new “gambling harms” organisation
Sweeter the second time around
There’s a real weight to some lyrics once you’re nearer the end than the beginning
The Middle Kingdom and the middle powers
China’s clash with Western power shattered its civilisational self-image. Europe is heading for a similar reckoning
The resistible centrism of Mark Gatiss
Why a centre-left worldview struggles to understand dissent
Price caps and political pygmies
Britain’s capitalist command economy cannot let businesses be
From the Desk of Lord Kronsteen
When a sketchwriter faces awkward questions, only a billionaire’s dictated letter of support will do
In partial defence of Steve Bray
You can’t blame the pro-EU irritant for making British politics undignified
Murders for June
Bodies in Brighton and spies in Scotland are features of our first crop of summer murder mysteries
The memory wars
Poland and Ukraine must find some way to stop falling out over history
Ant & Dec: heroically bland
Clear separation between private and public selves is faintly refreshing
When can we believe what we read?
Technology can make knowing the truth more difficult — but we should always have asked more questions about what we read
