Journalism

My victory over Mohammed Hijab

9 August 2025 9:00 am

One of the occupational hazards of being a journalist is being hounded by litigants. Indeed, one of the reasons why…

Why you should never trust a travel writer

19 July 2025 9:00 am

After one of Jeffrey Archer’s minor tangles with the absolute truth, his friend the late Barry Humphries remarked: ‘We all…

How I got under Macron’s skin

19 July 2025 9:00 am

The journalist Jonathan Miller, a cherished Spectator contributor, died last week at his home in Occitanie, France. Below is an…

Collateral damage: Vulture, by Phoebe Green, reviewed

12 July 2025 9:00 am

Sarah Byrne is covering her first war, reporting from Gaza. But her pursuit of a scoop triggers a series of events that may haunt her forever

Tim Franks goes in search of what it means to be Jewish

5 July 2025 9:00 am

In a thought-provoking family history, the BBC journalist addresses questions of identity – and to what extent we are products of our forebears

What Mark Twain owed to Charles Dickens

7 June 2025 9:00 am

It wasn’t just Dickens’s stage performances and publishing ventures that fascinated Twain, but the witty, journalistic style, which he mimicked to great effect in early travel books

The unbearable smugness of American journalists

3 May 2025 9:00 am

Polls occasionally appear which reveal the extent to which people trust – or rather don’t trust – journalists. In one…

Satire and settled scores: Universality by Natasha Brown reviewed

5 April 2025 9:00 am

Skewering journalistic pretension to authority is the main business of a novel that contrives to be both viciously accurate and weirdly off the mark

Is Keir Starmer really Morgan McSweeney’s puppet?

1 March 2025 9:00 am

Two lobby journalists portray the PM as the pawn of ‘the Irishman’ and as ‘a passenger on a train driven by others’ – but there is much more to Starmer than that

The exquisite vanity of the male sports writer

8 February 2025 9:00 am

A good place to catch the highbrow sports journalist in action is the ‘Pseuds Corner’ column of PrivateEye, where he…

The unfulfilled life: Ask Me Again, by Clare Sestanovich, reviewed

11 January 2025 9:00 am

Our aimless young heroine struggles to find herself in New York, Washington and Los Angeles – but even the novel’s inconclusiveness is compelling

Norman Lewis – a restless adventurer with a passion for broken-down places

11 January 2025 9:00 am

John Hatt’s latest selection of the travel writer’s journalism includes articles on Castro’s Havana, the Yemen of the Imams, Batista’s Cuba, French Indo-China and Neapolitan men of honour

Scroll model: confessions of a clickbait writer

2 November 2024 9:00 am

Working on a ‘trending’ news desk is the journalistic equivalent of being a battery-farmed hen. When I was still at…

Why won’t David Lammy help Jimmy Lai?

19 October 2024 9:00 am

As I write, the Foreign Secretary, David Lammy, is flying to China. So I am only guessing when I say…

The journalist’s journalist: the irrepressible Claud Cockburn

19 October 2024 9:00 am

After a distinguished spell on the Times, Cockburn launched The Week in 1933, whose scoops on Nazi Germany became essential reading for politicians, diplomats and journalists alike

Beware the ‘sourdough effect’

12 October 2024 9:00 am

As the joke goes, there are two ways to become a top judge. You can study law at university, then…

My plans for The Spectator

12 October 2024 9:00 am

Shortly after Boris Johnson was selected as the Conservative candidate for Henley, he invited me to lunch at The Spectator.…

The assassination of Georgi Markov bore all the hallmarks of a Russian wet job

6 July 2024 9:00 am

The Bulgarian dissident sailed too close to the wind with his revelations about Tudor Zhivkov in 1978, provoking the dictator to enlist Russian help in eliminating him

If only Britain knew how it was viewed abroad

22 June 2024 9:00 am

If the country were a person, it would need its friends to sit it down and deliver it a few home truths about its damaging behaviour to itself and others, says Michael Peel

The joy of hanging out with artists

18 May 2024 9:00 am

Lynn Barber finds painters and sculptors easily the most congenial people to interview - despite having received a death threat from the Chapman brothers

There are three sides to every story

13 April 2024 9:00 am

The psychologist Daniel Kahneman, who died last month aged 90, was perhaps most famous for his dictum that: ‘Nothing in…

A mother-daughter love story

17 February 2024 9:00 am

In her latest memoir, Leslie Jamison describes her pregnancy, experience of childbirth and devotion to her baby, returning repeatedly to the dilemmas of a working mother

Literary fun and games

3 June 2023 9:00 am

Academic jargon, back-scratching and literary scandals were all ripe for treatment in the long-running N.B. by J.C. column – now available in a glorious miscellany

‘A really complicated person’

8 October 2022 9:00 am

Almost two years after the death of Jan Morris, the jaunty travel writer and pioneer of modern gender transition, her…