Since stepping down from the fashion magazine after 25 years, Shulman has been accused of having run a ‘Sloanie club’ and taking swipes at her successor, Edward Enninful. © 2020 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. 8 August 2020. She talks about racism, British identity and the hard time given to social workers
The Guardian & The Observer Digital Editions is available to you at home or at work, and is the same edition as the printed copy available at the newsstand. It was an outburst of ugliness’McMafia author Misha Glenny: ‘I don’t want to be moral. A brilliant manuscript scholar delves into the mystery of Thomas Becket’s jewelled book of psalms Each month the Guardian’s review section chooses a poet or poem to highlight In a turbulent era, the media must define its values and principles, writes Guardian editor-in-chief Katharine Viner Out of work in London with nothing to lose, the author wrote 100,000 words in a few weeks – and then mined the ‘gibberish’ for his debut novel Brandon Taylor and C Pam Zhang, whose debuts are longlisted for this year’s Booker, talk about their close friendship, learning to write and dealing with grief We. Poem of the month Poem of the month: How to Do Absolutely Nothing by Barbara Kingsolver. Sections and supplements are laid out just as in the print edition, but complemented by a variety of digital tools which enhance the … The darkly riveting relationship between teenage siblings is explored in a gothic tale from the Booker-shortlisted author Was Naomi Campbell right to suggest that her Vogue had a diversity problem? Despite news of the demise of the Review supplement, Guardian editor-in-chief Katharine Viner is said to be a strong supporter of books coverage at the publication. They’re manipulating us for their own interest'‘We believe you harmed your child’: the war over shaken baby convictionsNicky Morgan: ‘It’s time for the senior people in my party to stop appeasing the Brexiters’‘A tale of decay’: the Houses of Parliament are falling downRobert Peston: 'I’m not saying Britain is finished, but our current problems are not a blip'Former Vogue editor Alexandra Shulman: ‘I find the idea that there was a posh cabal offensive’How colonial violence came home: the ugly truth of the first world war The Royal Court’s Vicky Featherstone: ‘We all knew about sexual harassment. Knew’The wilderness years: how Labour’s left survived to conquer Editors and writers of the Guardian’s Saturday supplements have accused the publisher of carrying out a “massive act of self-sabotage” with its proposals … © 2020 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. Each month the Guardian’s review section chooses a poet or poem to highlight All. I want to show people the way the world works'American reams: why a ‘paperless world’ still hasn’t happenedHow to be entitled: can Debrett’s help outsiders join Britain’s elite?Tony Blair: ‘The whole country has been pulled into this Tory psychodrama over Europe’Yale psychologist John Bargh: ‘Politicians want us to be fearful.
Support The Guardian Available for everyone, funded by readers Contribute Subscribe Contribute Search jobs Sign in My account Account overview Profile The former BBC foreign correspondent is thrilled at the TV adaptation of his book, but says the criminal interests he warned against have infiltrated London – and that Brexit raises the risk of further corruption Guardian review . All rights reserved. Saturday review More Saturday . My Darling from the Lions by Rachel Long; Moving House by Theophilus Kwek; Road Trip by Marvin Thompson; Sisters by Daisy Johnson review – too close for comfortFinding Freedom by Omid Scobie and Carolyn Durand – Harry and Meghan and the making of a modern royal familyDavid Nicholls: 'Gifting books feels like changing the music at someone else’s party'The Book of Trespass by Nick Hayes review – a trespasser's radical manifestoPoem of the month: How to Do Absolutely Nothing by Barbara Kingsolver'I decided the book should taste like a lime': DBC Pierre on writing Vernon God LittleScenes of a Graphic Nature by Caroline O'Donoghue review – art, female collaboration and identityThe mother load: Lisa Taddeo on parenting in a pandemicSummer by Ali Smith review – clear-sighted finale to a dazzling quartetTom Gauld reimagines classics set in the coronavirus – cartoonDaisy Johnson: 'It’s not an easy time to be looking at yourself or other people'Stephenie Meyer: 'I’d like to be remembered for writing The Host - but it’ll be Twilight’Act of Grace by Anna Krien review – a hugely impressive first novelThe Museum of Whales You Will Never See by A Kendra Greene – reviewThe Book in the Cathedral by Christopher de Hamel review – adventures of a manuscript sleuthTwo friends, both up for the Booker prize: 'We are exploring what it means to feel alien'I Give It to You by Valerie Martin review – an Italian summerA Traveller at the Gates of Wisdom by John Boyne review – an ambitious era-hopping epic
The British-Nigerian actor stars in Channel 4’s blockbuster new drama Kiri, as a police officer investigating the murder of a foster child. Corbyn has ‘genuine personal charm’, he says, but his team have placed pragmatism over principle All rights reserved. A witty and insightful portrait of an aspiring film-maker is submerged in a plotty mystery ... Saturday interview Bafta-winner Wunmi Mosaku: ... writes Guardian editor-in-chief Katharine Viner Published: 16 Nov 2017 .