Must love be all around?

Must love be all around?

I so so love you. With five unlikely little words, uttered within seconds of being elected, the new leader of the Labour Party showed the world that he was a sympathetic kind of guy who was prepared to let his feelings show, whether he felt them or not. Not so long ago, this kind of… Continue reading Must love be all around?

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A celebrity’s guide to impersonating yourself

In a cynical, marketing-crazed world, it is probably absurd to be distracted by three words on a promotional poster.    All the same, one or two people might have registered the mildest start of surprise at seeing a quote which appears beside the head of Stephen Fry in advertisements for his new one-man show. It… Continue reading A celebrity’s guide to impersonating yourself

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The danger in attacking Mr Brock

There are few certainties in British political life right now, but here is one. If the government follows through on its recent promise to allow the culling of badgers in areas infected by bovine TB, it will quickly find itself in trouble. Conservatives will be seen as the nasty party once more; there will be… Continue reading The danger in attacking Mr Brock

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Stand up for swearing

The much-loved author Alexander McCall Smith is concerned about moral pollution. He believes that swearing blights society, representing “casual aggression” and, under certain circumstances, “a form of sexual intrusion”. Coincidentally, what McCall Smith calls “strong language” has been on my mind, too, although it is fair to say we take a slightly different tack on… Continue reading Stand up for swearing

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Spare a thought for Rooney

Anyone who prefers to believe, with Woody Allen, that there is no such thing as bad sex would be advised to avoid a recent interview with one of the two women who have found fame by selling their accounts of going to bed with the footballer Wayne Rooney. The incident which has excited the press,… Continue reading Spare a thought for Rooney

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The quiet dignity of Mr Franzen

The famous novelist is making his promotional video. Shortly, his face will be on the front of Time magazine, his book praised to the heavens and at No 1 in the American bestseller list. “This might be a good place to register my profound discomfort at having to make a video like this,” he says,… Continue reading The quiet dignity of Mr Franzen

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Is this really a journey to fulfilment?

Recent publishing history suggests that there is good money to be made from telling women how to change their lives. In the 1980s, Shirley Conran surfed a great wave of female dissatisfaction with her bestseller Superwoman. It was no longer necessary for women to choose between family and work, Shirley told the world. With a… Continue reading Is this really a journey to fulfilment?

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It’s time we tackled people’s ignorance about rural life

How much more mature and sensible our culture would be if primary school children were taught about the countryside, preferably with regular nature walks in the company of a well-informed teacher. It may sound-old fashioned, even Blytonesque, but, if children were occasionally taken outside the bubble of our cosseted, urbanised culture, the results in later… Continue reading It’s time we tackled people’s ignorance about rural life

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Misplaced smugness at the BBC

It was one of those moments of quiet smugness at which the British excel. The director-general of the BBC had delivered the MacTaggart Lecture at the Edinburgh Festival, arguing that the BBC is more popular than ever with the general public, that there is a gulf between the criticism of the corporation to be found… Continue reading Misplaced smugness at the BBC

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We need these brilliant obsessives

  At a time when the careers of successful authors are as carefully marketed as those of politicians, it is good to be reminded now and then of the true nature of the literary life – egocentric, brutal, unreliable and often fuelled by fantasy and rage. Two sacred monsters of modern letters, Bruce Chatwin and… Continue reading We need these brilliant obsessives

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