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Anjana Ahuja Recommends Science

Nine Lessons and Carols for Godless People Conway Hall, London, December, various dates

For those who are already sick of Christmas, here’s an unabashed alternative. Robin Ince, below, is the ringmaster of this circus of science, comedy and music, which sets out to prove that godlessness need not equal joylessness. It features a variety of acts including Josie Long, Matt Parker and Helen Czerski, with proceeds going to a number of charities, including St Mungo’s. The marketing spiel hints at merry rationalism aplenty: “Hopefully, you will leave with a song in your heart (technically, it won’t be your heart. If it is your heart, that might be evidence of a murmur)…”

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Prospect Magazine
December 2017
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Prospect
A health check on UK plc
Astronauts and explorers submit to rigorous medicals
Letters & opinions
Letters & opinions
Joris Luyendijk is right when he says that the Brexit
Demonising the demos
The self-hating English and their foreign friends ignore what’s rotten in the state of Europe
Lines are crossed—then erased
Will the Republicans allow Trump to extinguish the rule of law?
He shall excite them with his speeches
Boris Johnson is no Churchill, no matter what he thinks
Divide and don’t rule
The diplomat who brokered the Iran deal says Trump is undermining America’s capacity to lead
The din drowning out our democracy
Shrill faction fighting is crushing a vital tradition of tolerance
The state of Kurdistan
An independence referendum had serious repercussions
Speed data
Writing more, reading less
Britain leads the world in publishing but lags behind when it comes to actual hours curled up with a book
The Duel
Should we scrap HS2?
YES High-Speed Two, the rail development that will
Main Features
Drawbridge economics
There’s nothing to discipline the Brexit economy—except for reality
Counter view: Brexit as shock therapy
Adam Posen articulates clearly the serious damage he
DOING LESS WITH MORE
Britain had lost the knack of turning smart new ideas into prosperity, even before it had to reckon with Brexit
WHEN THE BANKS LEAVE
MORE THAN A TENTH OF THE CITY’S BUSINESS IS NOW BOUND TO GO, BUT HOW MUCH WORSE COULD THINGS GET?
Welcome to THE RED SHIRES
The southeast of England has long been a Tory heartland. But now a wave of new arrivals—the DFLs, people who have moved “Down from London”—are making Labour a serious player
The war on aid
Britain has run the world’s most ambitious aid policy for 20 years, but now the Tory right has it in its sights. Can it be saved—and should it be?
Tyranny’s new trick
Hungary’s government is at war with liberalism
Cultural capital
Twenty years ago the Guggenheim put Bilbao on the map. But can art really transform a city?
Prospect Portrait
Lady justice
The new president of the UK’s Supreme Court, Brenda Hale, is not afraid to disrupt the legal establishment she now leads. Her feminism could shake up not just the young court, but the country. Is the judiciary ready, asks Afua Hirsch
The way we were
Getting plastered
Extracts from memoirs and diaries, chosen by Ian Irvine
Art & books
Rebels versus rulers
A new grand theory of history is carried off with panache and sardonic wit, says David Marquand
All that glitters
Salman Rushdie’s grandiose New York novel should come with an excess baggage fee, argues Sarah Churchwell
Falling Starman
The hero worship of David Bowie has obscured the graft behind his song-writing, says John Harris
The daemon headmaster
Philip Pullman can’t quite recreate the magic of His
Books in brief
Never let it be said that centrist politicians lack
Things to do this month
Emma Crichton-Miller Recommends Art
Edmund Clark: In Place of Hate Ikon Gallery, Birmingham
Michael Coveney Recommends Theatre
Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, 16th November to
Alexandra Coghlan Recommends Classical
What’s better than one soloist at the peak of her musical
Francine Stock Recommends Film
Aaron Sorkin’s highly enjoyable debut as a director
Neil Norman Recommends Opera
Although Pietro Mascagni’s Cavalleria rusticana (Rustic
Prospect Book Club
The Prospect Book Club meets every third Monday of the month (excluding bank holidays) at 6.30pm at 2 Queen Anne’s Gate, London, SW1H 9AA. To book tickets please visit prospectmagazine.co.uk/event
Life
Leith on language
One of the pieces of advice you most often hear, when
Life of the mind
“I’m not sure if I want to crawl into her vagina like
Matters of taste
The first seriously ridiculous cake I made was for
Wine
The world of wine can be intimidating to newcomers.
DIY investor
A few months ago, I helped to produce a report on the
Special report: Pensions
How pensions can win the youth vote
I was only half serious when, earlier this year, I
Auto enrolment has changed Britain
During my first few months as Minister for Pensions
How to tackle hidden fees and bad decisions
The more I learn about pensions in this country, the
Brief Encounter
Brief encounter
Aging Thoughtfully: Conversations about Retirement