The Current Issue

April 2026, Issue 550 Piers Brendon on Jan Morris * Richard Norton-Taylor on the Cambridge Five * Jane O’Grady on Wittgenstein * Wendy Holden on royal fashion * Martin Vander Weyer on Patrick Radden Keefe * Jeremy Treglown on Shakespeare in translation * Thomas W Hodgkinson on lesser-known siblings * Philip Parker on Offa * Simon Nixon on ransomware * Peter Davidson on nocturnes * Robert Eaglestone on silence * Ian Thomson on J G Ballard * Colin MacCabe on James Joyce * Sophie Oliver on Dorothea Tanning * Stephen Smith on Alain Delon * William Whyte on places of worship * Alexander Lee on guns * Barney Ronay on Gianluigi Buffon * Nic Liney on white nationalists * Rose George on the deep sea * Patrick Galbraith on Britain’s footpaths *  Keith Miller on Deborah Levy * Leo Robson on Ben Lerner * John-Baptiste Oduor on Gwendoline Riley * Felix Taylor on the Golden Dawn *  and much, much more…

Piers Brendon

Jan Morris: A Life

By Sara Wheeler

The subject of this excellent biography wished to be remembered as Jan ‘Empire’ Morris, author of the great imperial trilogy Pax Britannica, but she correctly predicted that the valedictory headlines would read ‘Sex Change Author Dies’. As James Morris, he had won early fame as the Times reporter who broke the news of the conquest of Everest on Coronation Day, 1953. And Morris’s real distinction, as Sara Wheeler affirms, was as a travel writer. It was a term she loathed. (Wheeler follows Morris’s own lead in using male pronouns for the author’s early life and female ones after 1970, when transition was nearing completion.) But as a young man James had immersed himself in Charles Doughty’s Travels in Arabia Deserta and Alexander Kinglake’s Eothen, and went on to evoke the character of places far and near in vivid prose, turning each odyssey into a personal ... read more

More Articles from this Issue

Richard Norton-Taylor

Stalin’s Apostles: The Cambridge Five and the Making of the Soviet Empire

By Antonia Senior

It may be thought that the notorious Cambridge spies – the majority of them members of the Apostles, that university’s secretive, elitist society – had been written out. But, as Stalin’s Apostles makes clear, such is not the case. Most of the books on what the KGB later called their ‘Magnificent Five’ – Kim Philby, Guy Burgess, Donald Maclean, Anthony Blunt and John Cairncross – have dwelt ... read more

Martin Vander Weyer

London Falling: A Mysterious Death in a Gilded City and a Family’s Search for Truth

By Patrick Radden Keefe

The New Yorker journalist Patrick Radden Keefe is best known in his native land for Empire of Pain (2021), an exposé of the Sackler dynasty and the role of their drug company Purdue Pharma in the opioid crisis. On this side of the Atlantic he has also been widely saluted for Say Nothing (2018), a history of the conflict in Northern Ireland as epitomised by the murder of ... read more

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