The Spectator

The week in books | 12 July 2013

From our UK edition

The latest issue of the Spectator is full to bursting with sparkling and varied book reviews. Here are some extracts from those reviews: Sam Leith reviews two new books (one by Douglas Hurd and Edward Young, the other by Dick Legend) that, to some extent, debunk the Tory legend of Benjamin Disraeli. ‘Disraeli…, as Hurd

Table

From our UK edition

‘A table away from any children, not next to any toilets and no wobbly legs.’

Daddy

From our UK edition

‘Grandad, tell me again about the old days when we were rubbish at sport and Britain never won anything.’

A Life

From our UK edition

‘A Life’, 1975, by Kitaj can be seen at the British Museum and at Marlborough Fine Art

Barometer | 11 July 2013

From our UK edition

Family games Andy Murray said that as a child he lived in the shadow of his elder brother Jamie, who was then thought the better tennis player. Some other sporting brothers: — As a teenager Wayne Lineker was thought to be more talented than his elder brother Gary. While Gary went on to captain England,

Portrait of the week | 11 July 2013

From our UK edition

Home There was a fine game of hunt-the-issue over the process to find a replacement, as parliamentary candidate in Falkirk, for the Labour MP Eric Joyce (who had decided not to stand again after being convicted of assaulting a Labour whip in the Strangers’ Bar). The union Unite was accused by Ed Miliband, the leader