February 2016, Issue 439 Douglas Smith on the Romanovs * John Adamson on the Holy Roman Empire * Andrew Roberts on Churchill & Ireland * Caroline Moorehead on the aftermath of the Second World War * Michael Burleigh on rare earth metals * Harriet Sergeant on London, the global city * Martin Vander Weyer on philanthropy * Sarah Bradford on royalty as a brand * Wendy Moore on Paul Kalanithi's memoir * Ian Sansom on Dashiell Hammett * Dominic Green on Groucho Marx * Keith Miller on Julian Barnes * Joanna Kavenna on Howard Jacobson * Anna Reid on Ukraine * Brian Dillon on portraiture * Patrick Scrivenor on menageries and much, much more…
The Current Issue
Douglas Smith
The Romanovs: 1613–1918
By Simon Sebag Montefiore
What took place ninety-eight years ago in the Ipatiev House has cast its shadow over the Romanov dynasty. The brutal, bloody end to the lives of Nicholas II, Alexandra, their five children and several retainers in the early hours of 17 July 1918 has left the impression that the family was somehow cursed from the start. Yet, as Simon Sebag Montefiore shows in his captivating new book, the story of the house of the Romanovs, when viewed from the perspectives of power, prestige and longevity, is one of startling success. Few regimes could boast of adding nearly 150 square kilometres a day to their empire for over 300 years, eventually ruling over one sixth of the earth. ‘Empire-building’, Montefiore notes... read more
More Articles from this Issue
Wendy Moore
When Breath Becomes Air
By Paul Kalanithi
The cover of Paul Kalanithi’s book says it all. The front shows a view from behind of a doctor in surgeon’s mask, cap and scrubs; the reverse shows a view from the same angle of a patient in a gaping printed gown. In When Breath Becomes Air, Kalanithi tells the story of his journey from surgeon to patient... read more
Andrew Roberts
Churchill and Ireland
By Paul Bew
Paul Bew has achieved the near impossible: he has somehow written a book on an important aspect of Winston Churchill’s statecraft that is totally comprehensive, genuinely ground-breaking and yet capable of being read in an afternoon. In a life that has been trawled over literally thousands of times... read more
John Adamson
The Holy Roman Empire: A Thousand Years of Europe’s History
By Peter H Wilson
Surveying the various models available in 1787 for governing the still-constitution-less United States, James Madison, perhaps the shrewdest of the Founding Fathers, was certain of one thing: the Holy Roman Empire, at that date the largest of all European states... read more
Peter Jones
Battling the Gods: Atheism in the Ancient World
By Tim Whitmarsh
By the fifth century AD, Christianity had emerged as the predominant force in the Roman Empire, forging for the first time in the Graeco-Roman world an alliance between supreme power and religious absolutism. Polytheistic religion, largely a matter of ritual, had embraced worshippers of gods of all shapes and sizes, but what counted now was correct belief in the one true God, measured against prevailing standards of orthodoxy... read more
Michael Burleigh
The Elements of Power: Gadgets, Guns, and the Struggle for a Sustainable Future in the Rare Metal Age
By David S Abraham
Books on resource wars are ten a penny and usually focus on oil or water conflicts. David Abraham’s attractively written book is unusual because it deals with commodities lurking in plain sight within cars, planes, fibre-optic cables, structural steels, LED lights, cameras, computers, televisions, MRI scanners, military night-vision goggles... read more
Keith Miller
The Noise of Time
By Julian Barnes
In the years after the Second World War, during Dmitri Shostakovich’s second period of disfavour with the Soviet authorities, he wasn’t just humiliatingly wheeled out at the Cultural and Scientific Congress for World Peace in New York, a fellow travellers’ jamboree that just about snuck in under the McCarthyist wire. He was also packed off to Leipzig to judge a piano competition inaugurated to commemorate J S Bach on the bicentenary of his death... read more
Most Read
moreSamantha Ellis
Charlotte Brontë: A Life
By Claire Harman
Victoria Glendinning
Living on Paper: Letters from Iris Murdoch 1934–1995
By Avril Horner & Anne Rowe (edd)
Jonathan Beckman
Twitching Fairy Penguin
Jonathan Beckman
Hours of Pleasure
Rowan Williams
Strangers Drowning: Voyages to the Brink of Moral Extremity
By Larissa MacFarquhar
From the Archives
moreFrom the December 1984 issue
Germaine Greer
Nudes: 1981–1984
By David Bailey
From the October 1984 issue
Gillian Greenwood
Nights at the Circus
By Angela Carter
From the June 1989 issue
Hilary Mantel
What am I Doing Here
By Bruce Chatwin
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