Jamelle Bouie is a columnist for The New York Times. Read anywhere with the London Review of Books app, available now from the App Store for Apple devices, Google Play for Android devices and Amazon ...
In 1928, the V&A acquired a previously unknown portrait. It shows the Black Jamaican polymath Francis Williams (c. 1690-1762), dressed in a wig, surrounded by books and scientific instruments. In all ...
The polycrisis that is unfolding demands not a return to the status quo but urgent, progressive answers both at home ...
You might think that a novelist who works in more than one language would want language itself to become conceptual, ...
The cybercriminals had breached the library’s Customer Relationship Management (CRM) databases. ‘At a minimum these databases ...
The bequest was the third of thirteen listed in his will of 7 May 1975, after another, larger one to the Catholic Missions ...
Given what it sets out to do, it’s hard to fault The Thursday Murder Club. The sentences flow smoothly, the jokes ...
The first hour of Anora, Sean Baker says, belongs to the genre of romantic comedy. This makes interesting sense if ...
‘Even blindfolded,’ Emanuel Litvinoff wrote of the interwar East End in Journey Through a Small Planet (1972), ‘I’d have known where we were by the smell of the different streets – reek of rotten ...
At PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh on 4 November, teams of ushers were handing out signs that said: ‘Trump will fix it.’ They didn’t allow homemade signs because it was a safety risk, they said, though ...
Music critic Ian Penman is back with a pioneering book of essays alluding to a lost moment in musical history ‘when cultures collided and a cross-generational and “cross-colour” awareness was born’.
The next morning, the city was silent. DC is openly hostile to Trump: more than 90 per cent of voters backed ...