Culture

Culture

The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.

Olivia Potts

Should family history, however painful, be memorialised forever?

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Be under no illusions: this is not a food memoir. Chopping Onions on My Heart is a linguistic exploration of belonging; a history of the Jewish community in Iraq; and an urgent endeavour to save an endangered language. Above all, it is a reckoning with generational trauma. The subjects of Samantha Ellisโ€™s previous books include

Vampires, werewolves and Sami sorcerers

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I have to be honest: Iโ€™ve never been much concerned with what happened in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1387. I suspect that may even be true for many Lithuanians. In Silence of the Gods, Francis Young pinpoints this year โ€“ of the conversion of the duchy to Christianity โ€“ as the official triumph

Misfits unite: The Emperor of Gladness, by Ocean Vuong, reviewed

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As a poet, Ocean Vuong has won every prize going. Now hereโ€™s The Emperor of Gladness, his second novel. His first, On Earth Weโ€™re Briefly Gorgeous, a coming-of-age story, is currently being filmed. This latest oneis wild, unwieldy and too long. It is fiction/autofiction mixed with 19th- and 20th-century warfare, plus contemporary angst and craziness.

Imperialism still overshadows our intellectual history

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Peter Watson begins his survey of the history of ideas in Britain with the assertion that the national mindset (which at that time was the English mindset) changed significantly after the accession of Elizabeth I. His book โ€“ a guide to the nature of British intellectual curiosity since the mid-16th century โ€“ begins there, just

The past is another country: Ripeness, by Sarah Moss, reviewed

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Sarah Moss is a prolific and vital novelist whose books encompass an array of subjects from Victorian social reform and 19th-century Japan to broken Brexit Britain and eating disorders. She combines teaching at University College, Dublin with writing in real time: The Fell, set during the second lockdown, came out in the summer of 2021,

Who started the Cold War?

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Over a few short months after the defeat of Nazism in May 1945, the โ€˜valiant Russiansโ€™ who had fought alongside Britain and America had โ€˜transformed from gallant allies into barbarians at the gates of western civilisationโ€™. So begins Vladislav Zubokโ€™s thorough and timely study of the history of the Cold War โ€“ or, as he

A.C. Benson enters the pantheon of great English diarists

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All great diarists have something intensely silly about them: Boswellโ€™s and Pepysโ€™s periodic bursts of lechery and panic; Chips Channonโ€™s unrealistic dreams of political greatness leavened with breathless excitement over royal dukes and handsome boys; Alan Clarkโ€™s fits of romantic, almost Jacobite, dreaming; James Lees-Milneโ€™s absurd flights of rage. I dare say the mania that

Admirable in their awfulness โ€“ the siblings Gus and Gwen John

Lead book review

โ€˜In 50 yearsโ€™ time,โ€™ Augustus John gloomily reflected following his sisterโ€™s death on 18 September 1939, โ€˜I will be known as the brother of Gwen John.โ€™ He was right. In 2004, when the Tate mounted a joint retrospective of Augustus and Gwen John, it was Gwen who had become the major artist. The โ€˜variable strident

Church teaching on homosexuality can be revised

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Studies of Christianityโ€™s problems and prospects often entail a distinction between the singer and the song. At an institutional level, the worldโ€™s largest faith is in deep trouble throughout much of western Europe โ€“ and increasingly in North America, too. Widely rehearsed elsewhere, the reasons for this steep decline include the spread of individualism along

A searching question: Heartwood, by Amity Gaige, reviewed

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The Appalachian Trail is Americaโ€™s secular version of the Camino de Santiago but more than twice as long. In Amity Gaigeโ€™s Heartwood, Valerie Gillis is a 42-year-old nurse and experienced trail-walker who nonetheless vanishes one day in the northern stretch, in Maine, the wildest of the New England states. Heading the search for her is

Nunc est bibendum โ€“ to Horace, the lusty rebel

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Horace suffers from a reputation as an old manโ€™s poet. Classicists often joke that Catullus and Martial are for the young, and Horace for those of a certain vintage โ€“ wine being a favourite Horatian theme. Many lose their thirst for his Odes at school, only to realise their brilliance decades later. Classroom Horace is

An ill wind: Poppyland, by D.J. Taylor, reviewed

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As the term refers to the stretch of the north Norfolk coastline between Sheringham and Mundesley, only one of the stories in D.J. Taylorโ€™s engrossing new collection strictly takes place in โ€˜Poppylandโ€™. However, the others seldom stray far. In โ€˜At Mr McAllisterโ€™sโ€™, one of two stories set in and around Norwich market, the feckless employee

No place is safe: The Brittle Age, by Donatella di Pietrantonio, reviewed

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This slim, unsettling novel opens with Lucia trying to navigate the โ€˜messโ€™ of her daughter Amandaโ€™s return home to their apartment near Pescara, in Italyโ€™s Abruzzo. Pieces of torn bread, a heaped-up blanket and other strange โ€˜tracesโ€™ are indications of Amandaโ€™s emotional disarray after hastily leaving Milan on the eve of lockdown. But sheโ€™d already

Everyone who was anyone in Russia was spied on โ€“ including Stalin

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Vasili Mitrokhin was a KGB colonel smuggled out of Russia by MI6 in the early 1990s with a treasure trove of notes from the KGBโ€™s archive. The resulting 3,500 CI reports (CI meaning counter-intelligence โ€“ information about hostile spies) identified 1,000 KGB agents around the world and were shared with 36 countries. The CIA rated

What Mark Twain owed to Charles Dickens

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You know Mark Twainโ€™s story. Youโ€™ve got no excuse not to; there have been so many biographies. Starting in the American South as Samuel Clemens, he took his pen name from the call of the Mississippi boatmen on reaching two fathoms. His lectures, followed by his travel pieces and novels, enchanted America and then the

How the US military became world experts on the environment

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In 1941, as it entered the second world war, the US Army barely bested Bulgariaโ€™s for size and combat readiness. Nor did US forces have very much idea of what conditions were like in their new theatres of operation. In the winter of 1942, hot-weather gear and lightweight machinery landed in the deserts of North

โ€˜Sitting the 11-plus was the most momentous event of my lifeโ€™ โ€“ Geoff Dyer

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Geoff Dyer, eh? Geoff Bloody Dyer โ€“ without doubt one of contemporary Eng. Lit.โ€™s most successful, intellectually playful and stylistically distinctive voices. His extraordinary oeuvre spans fiction, non-fiction, memoir, criticism and genre-defying hybrids, often likened โ€“ I donโ€™t know by who, but by me at least now โ€“ to greats such as W.G. Sebald or

Why going nuclear is humanityโ€™s only hope

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There are three parties when it comes to global warming. First, the hard right, which says it isnโ€™t happening, and even if it is that we can do nothing about it. Then there are the far leftish Luddites who would smash all power generation systems, allowing only wind turbines, wave power etc. Finally there are