The Current Issue

July 2026, Issue 553 Richard Carwardine on Abraham Lincoln * Jonathan Keates on Napoleon III * Martin Vander Weyer on the first US depression * Levi Roach on Rome and Christianity * Michael Burleigh on Nord Stream * Peter Moore on Patrick O’Brian * Peter Thonemann on Homer’s afterlife * John Stokes on Chekhov’s juvenilia * Stephen Smith on Cuba * Richard Smyth on Britain’s mountains * Miranda Seymour on childhood memories * Jennie Erin Smith on butterflies * Charles Darwent on Duchamp in New York * Rupert Christiansen on Stephen Sondheim * William Keegan on Brexit * D J Taylor on Simon Raven * Antony Spawforth on Alexander the Great * Tom Cook on typesetting * Norma Clarke on an artistic friendship * Simon Nixon on a corrupted Britain * Charlie Louth on Paul Celan *  David Anderson on terrorism * Mark Glancy on movies * Paddy Crewe on Doireann Ní Ghríofa *  and much, much more…

Richard Carwardine

Boss Lincoln: The Partisan Life of Abraham Lincoln

By Matthew Pinsker

During the tumult of the American Civil War, Abraham Lincoln happily declared that ‘he was a party man and did not believe in any man who was not’. This remark to a conservative Democrat, and the allied belief of a radical Republican that ‘no man was ever more firmly or consistently the representative of a party than was Mr Lincoln’, are not quoted in Matthew Pinsker’s fine study of the 16th president’s political formation and party practice, but they capture the spirit of this important book. Pinsker’s title is arresting... read more

More Articles from this Issue

Jonathan Keates

The People’s Emperor: The Unlikely Rise and Spectacular Fall of Napoleon III

By Edward Shawcross

Of all the dominant actors on the mid-19th-century scene, Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte was the most charismatic and divisive. Admittedly he had nothing of that physique du rôle which a nation traditionally demands of its leaders. ‘The Emperor is extremely short’, noted Queen Victoria after their first meeting at Windsor Castle, ‘but with a head and a bust which ought to belong to a much taller man.’ Yet though Prince Albert dismissed him as merely ‘a walking lie’, she herself was won over quickly enough by her guest’s deep-layered charm, with its touch of flirtatiousness. ‘His love-­making’, noted the foreign secretary... read more

Levi Roach

Rome’s Age of Revolution: Augustus, Empire and the Making of Christianity

By Tim Whitmarsh

Regardless of one’s religious or confessional perspective, the crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth at the hands of the Roman authorities c AD 33 represents one of the most momentous events in world history. Over the course of the coming centuries, the followers of this Jewish messianic preacher would establish themselves as arguably the first ‘world religion’. On present estimates they comprise over a quarter of the globe’s population. Jesus did not, of course, understand himself as founding a new faith; his teachings were meant to represent the continuation – and culmination – of a tradition of revelation stretching back to Abraham and Isaac... read more

Michael Burleigh

The Nord Stream Conspiracy: The Inside Story of the Explosions that Shook the World

By Bojan Pancevski

Since the start of Russia’s war in Ukraine, the SBU (the Ukrainian secret service) has been waging a campaign against Russian officers on their home turf and even outside apartment blocks in Moscow, as well as against Ukrainian collaborators in the Donbas. One target perished while riding an elevator with a bomb on its roof. Another died after a volunteer prostitute fixed a device to her client’s mattress. Like their FSB and GRU equivalents, the SBU agents who do these things are hard-drinking tough guys (mostly), but with an ability to think outside bureaucratic boxes. This is a story about critical infrastructure... read more

Stephen Smith

Mrs Gargantua: Reports from Cuba

By J S Tennant

In the Cold War struggle between the West and the Soviet Bloc, nothing was off limits. Not the space race. Not the Olympic Games. Not even cows. Reared on Cuba’s Isle of Pines, Ubre Blanca (White Udder) could produce an astonishing volume of gold top. She was Comecon’s answer to Beecher Arlinda Ellen, a prodigious milch cow out of Rochester, Indiana. Within a year of taking power in 1959, Fidel Castro decreed the most desirable product of the national herd was no longer beef but milk, to suckle Cuba’s young... read more

Martin Vander Weyer

1873: The First Great Depression and the Making of the Modern World

By Liaquat Ahamed

‘History does not repeat itself, but it often rhymes’ is an aphorism usually attributed to Mark Twain, whose satirical novel The Gilded Age (cowritten with Charles Dudley Warner) was published three months after the Wall Street panic of 1873. That episode is pivotal in Liaquat Ahamed’s panorama of the origins of an era of deflation, stagnation and unrest – the ‘first Great Depression’ – that afflicted much of the world for the rest of the century. Twain himself later wrote... read more

John Stokes

Earliest Stories: Stories, Novellas, Humoresques, 1880–1882

By Anton Chekhov (Edited by Rosamund Bartlett & Elena Michajlowska)

In his introduction to a selection of Chekhov’s short fiction published in 1998, the novelist Richard Ford remarked, ‘there is, of course, no typical Chekhov story, a fact that by itself should please us, and makes the pseudo-critical shorthand of “Chekhovian” essentially pointless.’ This new and much longer collection of fifty-eight freshly translated items, all dating from 1880–82 and largely unknown outside Russian collected... read more

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