London Review of Books 1 December 2022
Draft notes from a reading of the magazine (WiP - will be edited further)
Adam Shatz
‘You think our country’s so innocent?’
On the midterm elections which were not as bad as people feared
[A] growing number of Republicans are running away from Trump, the biggest loser in the midterms. Since 2016, the Republicans have believed they can’t win without him, given his magnetic hold on their base. But now it seems they can’t win with him, either. A growing number of Republican politicians and donors now see Ron DeSantis as a safer bet than Trump in 2024. DeSantis isn’t a ‘moderate’ Republican. He boasts of having turned Florida into a ‘citadel of freedom’ against critical race theory, ‘Faucian dystopia’, ‘Soros-funded prosecutors’ and transgender athletes.
A second Biden campaign does not sit well with most progressives, and not only because of his age. Critics of his foreign policy cite a list of mistakes: the embarrassing fist bump with Mohammed bin Salman, who repaid him by cutting oil production; the messy evacuation of Afghanistan; the failure to hold the Israeli government accountable for the army’s killing of Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian American journalist, let alone its policy of apartheid in Israel and the Occupied Territories. He has replaced Trump’s abandonment of human rights with a highly selective application that favours Ukrainians over Palestinians, Egyptians and Yemenis; along with his secretary of state, Antony Blinken, he has revived the language of Cold War Atlanticism, an anachronistic idiom in an era of American decline and Chinese ascendancy.
Letters
Anthony King, Gabriel Egan, David Elstein, James Meek, Stephen Daker, Nicholas McDowell, Hugh Aldersey-Williams, Raymond Rogers, Sheila Russell, Pratinav Anil, Andrew Dobson, Inigo Kilborn
Jonathan Parry
The Chief: The Life of Lord Northcliffe by Andrew Roberts
Northcliffe’s lavish lifestyle – the hotel suites in Paris, Biarritz, Switzerland and the Riviera, the sponsorship of air travel, the twenty trips to the US – also made him an international celebrity.
Barbara Newman
Albertus Magnus and the World of Nature by Irven Resnick and Kenneth Kitchell
Michael Wood
At the Movies: ‘Living’
Tessa Hadley
The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey
Amy Larocca
A Visible Man by Edward Enninful
Hal Foster
If These Apples Should Fall: Cézanne and the Present by T.J. Clark
Stefan Collini
Professing Criticism: Essays on the Organisation of Literary Study by John Guillory
Gazelle Mba
At the V&A: Africa Fashion
James Lasdun
Who Killed Jane Stanford? A Gilded Age Tale of Murder, Deceit, Spirits and the Birth of a University by Richard White
A.E. Stallings
Two Poems
Clare Bucknell
The Old Woman with the Knife by Gu Byeong-mo, translated by Chi-Young Kim
Chris Power
The Twilight Zone by Nona Fernández, translated by Natasha Wimmer
A novel, or fictionalised autobiography, set in Pinochet’s Chile.
Daniel Trilling
My Fourth Time, We Drowned: Seeking Refuge on the World’s Deadliest Migration Route by Sally HaydenThe Naked Don’t Fear the Water: A Journey through the Refugee Underground by Matthieu Aikins
“In February 2020, Fuad Bedru spotted someone he recognised in the street. Kidane Zekarias Habtemariam, a people smuggler originally from Eritrea, was on an international wanted list, accused of holding thousands of people from various African countries captive in a ‘safe house’ in Libya, where they were starved, beaten and raped while Kidane and his fellow smugglers extorted money from their relatives. Fuad’s attempt to reach Europe had failed and he ended up back where he started, in Ethiopia. Recognising Kidane in Addis Ababa, he found a police patrol and told the officers that ‘the person standing by the electronics stall was one of the world’s most wanted human smugglers.’ Kidane offered the police officers a bribe, but they arrested him. He went on trial in October 2020.”
Sally Hayden attended the trial, but Western powers like the USA and the UK weren’t interested in this brave attempt to prosecute the people smugglers.
Laleh Khalili
Short Cuts: In Sharm El-Sheikh
Simone Haysom
Security and Conservation: The Politics of the Illegal Wildlife Trade by Rosaleen Duffy
Militarising conservation may not be such a good idea
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