Philip Hensher

Is ‘wind drought’ the latest climate catastrophe?

22 November 2025 9:00 am

In an enjoyable guide to wind-related topics, Simon Winchester reports that terrestrial wind speeds are mysteriously declining and we are now in the grip of ‘the Great Stilling’

Are Vermeer’s paintings really coded religious messages?

25 October 2025 9:00 am

‘View of Delft’ is not just a representation of some buildings seen across a stretch of dullish water but a vision of the celestial city, argues Andrew Graham-Dixon

Jilly Cooper’s novels could well become classics

7 October 2025 5:00 pm

Dame Jilly Cooper, who has died at 88, had a remarkable career, turning herself from a sparkling writer for newspapers…

Since when did the English love to queue?

4 October 2025 9:00 am

Far from being an ancient trait, the ‘irksome novelty’ dates from 1939, according to Graham Robb – whose idiosyncratic history of Britain corrects many erroneous beliefs

What has the reparations movement ever done for victims of modern slavery?

20 September 2025 9:00 am

Until now it has focused on extracting trillions from European governments in compensation for historic crimes while ignoring horrors still being perpetrated today

Christopher Marlowe, the spy who changed literature for ever

30 August 2025 4:00 am

The 16th-century playwright led a violent, tempestuous and clandestine short life but alone among his contemporaries he speaks to us in a familiar way

Give Eric Ravilious a rest

2 August 2025 9:00 am

How do artists sustain a reputation? We’d like to think it’s on the basis of their work. In the case…

Public libraries deserve to shut – they’ve forgotten why they exist

5 July 2025 9:00 am

The usual piece about public libraries runs like this. Public libraries are for ‘more than just books’. They are in…

‘Too bohemian for Bournemouth’: the young Lawrence Durrell

28 June 2025 9:00 am

Begged by his mother to go somewhere his behaviour wouldn’t ‘show so much’, the future novelist, aged 19, embarked on a lifetime of travel and rarely visited Britain again

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

14 June 2025 9:00 am

The intimate of writers, politicians and royalty, Benson confined his waspish anecdotes to journals kept over a period of 40 years, now available in a magnificent two-volume edition

Spare us from ‘experimental’ novels

7 June 2025 9:00 am

Some sorts of books and dramas have very strict rules. We like a lot of things to be absolutely predictable.…

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

Studying Dickens at university was once considered demeaning. Now it’s too demanding

10 May 2025 9:00 am

Accessible, ‘relevant’ short stories are increasingly replacing the classics, as the monuments of Victorian literature defeat today’s undergraduates

Whether adored or despised, Princess Diana is never forgotten

3 May 2025 9:00 am

Edward White examines the effect of the former Princess of Wales on the millions worldwide who never even laid eyes on her

Why the Japanese flock to Battersea Park

12 April 2025 9:00 am

They weren’t familiar park visitors, but a couple with a specific purpose, laden down with camera equipment. They unpacked carefully,…

A novel in disguise: Theory & Practice, by Michelle de Kretser, reviewed

29 March 2025 9:00 am

De Kretser’s witty, innovative take on the immigrant’s predicament tries ingeniously to persuade us that we are not reading fiction but documentary truth

The pointlessness of the German Peasants’ War – except in Marxist ideology

8 February 2025 9:00 am

The short-lived 16th-century revolt resolved absolutely nothing, but it loomed large in Engels’s thought and in the official DDR interpretation of history

The beauty and tedium of the works of Adalbert Stifter

18 January 2025 9:00 am

The 19th-century Austrian was an astonishingly pure stylist, as W.G. Sebald acknowledges – but it takes real dedication to craft to write such boring novels

Once upon a time in Germany: the Grimms’ legacy of revenge and gory redemption

11 January 2025 9:00 am

The Household Tales only attained their standing after the brothers’ death, with the unification of Germany and the decades of nationalism that led to catastrophe

The joy of the Turkish barber

7 December 2024 9:00 am

Just as you always hope will happen, I knew I had met the man of my dreams almost on sight.…

Reading the classics should be a joy, not a duty

16 November 2024 9:00 am

Edwin Frank’s survey of 20th-century fiction stresses the po-faced seriousness of the great novel. But many masterpieces revel in the ridiculous – or are about nothing at all

The joy of weight loss

19 October 2024 9:00 am

It was a few months ago. I was coming back from my morning walk with Greta in Battersea Park, so…

The demonising of homosexuals in post-war Britain

19 October 2024 9:00 am

The tabloids in particular stirred up fear and distrust with lurid stories of orgies, prostitution, drug-taking, political corruption, sinister concealment and susceptibility to blackmail

The trivial details about royalty are what really fascinate us

31 August 2024 9:00 am

Craig Brown’s focus on specifics that other biographers would consider beneath them brings rich rewards

The dark side of your local dog show

3 August 2024 9:00 am

Over at the judging for Waggiest Tail, things were getting acrimonious. ‘That bloody woman,’ my new acquaintance muttered. We were…