FROM THE MAGAZINE

October 2020

The Spectator would like to make one appeal in this tumultuous year: for America to keep faith in democracy.’

Why must we ‘live with’ coronavirus?

Living with is a phrasal verb first applied, in the 17th century, to spouses

By Dot Wordsworth

From the Magazine

Pimp’s paradise

Nevada’s legal brothels are a disaster for women

By Julie Bindel

From the Magazine

Politics

Bad Kshama: meet Seattle’s worst socialist

Kshama Sawant’s attitude to Amazon has come to reach the level of a personal hatred rarely seen outside marriage

By Christopher Sandford

From the Magazine

Politics

The Democratic art of magical thinking

It is not surprising that Democrats prefer pleasing fantasy to sobering reality

By Roger Kimball

From the Magazine

Politics

The hostages’ president

For all his faults, Trump cares about captive Americans

By Paul Wood

From the Magazine

Europe

Britain clambers aboard the BLM bandwagon

The public does not buy into the notion that there is ‘structural’ racism in the UK. There isn’t

By Rod Liddle

From the Magazine

Politics

Godforsaken: religion is vanishing from American politics

The country is undergoing a Great Unraveling

By Damian Thompson

From the Magazine

Spectator Editorial

The danger this time

The promise to live and let live rather than treat every political battle as all-out war to the death is breaking down

By Spectator Editorial

From the Magazine

How many homes are at extreme risk of wildfire?

Texas has the second-highest number of any state

By The Spectator

From the Magazine

Politics

How democracy dies

Mail-in voting undermines elections

By Daniel McCarthy

From the Magazine

The 747 was the last moment of romance in air travel

From the ground, you almost sensed a 747 before you heard it

By Stephen Bayley

From the Magazine

Middle East

Pompeo’s principles

Talking policy, paradigms and turning Trump’s instincts into reality

By Dominic Green

From the Magazine

Books + Arts

Books

Monumental Mahler

The Eighth: Mahler and the World in 1910 by Stephen Johnson reviewed

By Philip Hensher

From the Magazine

Art

Morals and mortality

How will we remember the great musicians of the past?

By Emily Ferguson

From the Magazine

Art

Still painting after all these years

While others have postured, Paul Resika has kept on painting

By Andrew L. Shea

From the Magazine

Architecture

The perception of doors

Take hope, ye who enter here

By Benjamin Riley

From the Magazine

Books

French letters

Twentieth Century Paris: A Literary Guide for Travellers (1900-1950) by Marie-José Gransard reviewed

By Patrick Marnham

From the Magazine

Books

Modern English

The Blind Light by Stuart Evers reviewed

By Alex Preston

From the Magazine

Books

Small is beautiful

A Lover’s Discourse by Xiaolu Guo reviewed

By Mike Cormack

From the Magazine

Art

The art of the presidency

What are the major artworks of the Trump years?

By Will Lloyd

From the Magazine

Art

Out of Nam’s way

In country, Down Under

By James Delingpole

From the Magazine

Art

Old soul rebel

Kevin Rowland, decades after Dexys, is still running

By Michael Hann

From the Magazine

Books

Mart and marketing

Martin Amis has written another autobiography — sort of

By D.J. Taylor

From the Magazine

Books

The eyes have it

Renaissance and Baroque Art: Selected Essays by Leo Steinberg reviewed

By Eric Gibson

From the Magazine

Books

A river runs through it

Magdalena: River of Dreams by Wade Davis reviewed

By Hugh Thomson

From the Magazine

Life

Tech

Bring back robber barons

Why can’t Amazon and Facebook do what Carnegie and Rockefeller did?

By Mary Kate Skehan

From the Magazine

Home

Dickie and me

As older brothers separated by half a generation go, he has been a good one

By Digby Dent

From the Magazine

The demise of American schooling

Taxpayers have no reason whatever to continue to support the US educational profession, such as it is

By Chilton Williamson, Jr.

From the Magazine

Place

Salamis tactics

Piraeus was the point of entry for the notorious plague that afflicted Athens in 480 BC

By A.E. Stallings

From the Magazine

Home

The next so-called civil war

‘To-day the doctor says I must die — all is over with me — ah, so young to die’

By Bill Kauffman

From the Magazine

Place

My debt to Royaumont

A Spanish flag flew on the palace to protect it from the occupying Germans

By David Pryce-Jones

From the Magazine

Diary

New York has turned ugly

I haven’t seen so many overflowing garbage cans or homeless people since the 1970s

By John R. MacArthur

From the Magazine

Internet

The coming stitch-up

The Tangled Web We Weave: Inside the Shadow System That Shapes the Internet by James Ball reviewed

By Cory Doctorow

From the Magazine

Faith

The new crusaders

Churches have become a target for the young and angry

By Luke Coppen

From the Magazine

Place

The most locked-down couple in Eastern Europe

My wife had broken her heel and I was stricken with sciatica

By John O’Sullivan

From the Magazine

Faith

Antifa made me Christian

If religion is opium, Marxism is crystal meth

By Chadwick Moore

From the Magazine

Home

Rotten apple: New Yorkers are fleeing to the suburbs

The tradesmen have never been busier, sprucing up houses to New York tastes. White everything, I’m told

By Philip Delves Broughton

From the Magazine

Home

A lament for the foreign correspondent’s house — and his hospitality

He claimed to love riots, and I have no trouble believing it

By Jeremy Clarke

From the Magazine

High Life

The art of being a mistress

Nobody ever wins when dealing with the Saudis, and Juan Carlos was no exception

By Taki

From the Magazine

Internet

Letters from the politically homeless

Almost every Democrat voting for Trump has a story about being ostracized, shamed or losing a friend

By Bridget Phetasy

From the Magazine

Food and Drink

Drink

In the soup

An appreciation of cuisine’s kindest course

By Jane Stannus

From the Magazine

Drink

Ports for any storm

A winery is fortifying New York

By Roger Kimball

From the Magazine

Drink

Don’t listen to the health fascists — drink up

If alcohol can be part of a healthy lifestyle, it is difficult to demonize

By Christopher Snowdon

From the Magazine

Drink

Dearborn beloved

A pilgrimage to a people’s pantry

By Marlo Safi

From the Magazine