The Spectator

Shelf Life: Iain (M) Banks

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Scottish novelist Iain (M) Banks is this week's Shelf Life provocateur. He tells us how he likes to test his potential lovers and what extreme punishments he exacts on books he doesn't like. 1) What are you reading at the moment? The Hell of it All by Charlie Brooker and Anatomy of the Orchestra by Norman del Mar are by the bedside, but the book I've just started is The Believing Brain by Michael Shermer (at only a year old, this is ferociously up-to-date by my standards). 2) As a child, what did you read under the covers? The Beano 3) Has a book ever made you cry, and if so which one? A few have. Most recently, I got a bit misty-eyed at the end of And The Land Lay Still by James Robertson.

Portrait of the week | 1 November 2012

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Home Hitachi bought Horizon Nuclear Power for £700 million, giving it rights to build nuclear power stations in Anglesey and Gloucestershire. John Hayes, the energy minister, said that Britain was ‘peppered’ with onshore wind turbines, and ‘enough is enough’. HM Revenue and Customs wrote to families with at least one member earning more than £50,000 telling them they are no longer entitled to the full amount of child benefit. Some 100,000 ash trees had been burnt in an attempt to halt the spread of Chalara fraxinea, a fungus deadly to them, David Heath, the environment minister, told parliament, as import of the trees was banned.

Land of the right

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Next week, weather permitting, Americans will go to the ballot to choose between an unpopular Democratic president and an uninspiring Republican challenger. The 2012 US election may have become more exciting in recent weeks — the polls indicate a tense finish — but that fundamental quandary remains. President Obama, the great liberal hope of four years ago, has disappointed. He has failed, spectacularly, to fix the American economy. His re-election campaign has been remarkable only in that he has said next to nothing about what he plans to do with four more years in power. As The Spectator went to press, however, it looked as if he would still somehow win a second term. But conservative Americans ought not lose heart.

All together now | 1 November 2012

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Fraser Nelson British politicians have long dreamt of regulating the press, but have always been hampered by the basic point that the press isn’t theirs to regulate. Only now, with the industry on its knees, do the enemies of press freedom feel able to strike. Their hope is to appoint a press watchdog who would stand well back at first, but be able to tighten the screws if need be. The less scrupulous MPs believe that from that moment on, power will shift. They will be able to speak softly to journalists, while carrying a very big stick. I had a taste of this last month when a senior MP telephoned me asking me to discipline a Spectator writer who had displeased him on Twitter.

Shelf Life: Judy Finnigan

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Judy Finnigan tells us which Dane she'd take on holiday, which book she found in her mother's bedside drawer and which book had better be on Richard Madeley's reading list. Eloise by Judy Finnigan is published by Sphere. She tweets @judyfinnigan. 1). What are you reading at the moment? I’m currently re-reading American Wife, by Curtis Sittenfeld. 2). As a child, what did you read under the covers? Lady Chatterley’s Lover, by D.H. Lawrence. I found it in my mother’s bedside drawer. 3). Has a book ever made you cry, and if so which one? The Time Traveller’s Wife, by Audrey Niffenegger. Do not judge this wonderful novel by the awful film. 4). You are about to be put into solitary confinement for a year and allowed to take three books. What would you choose?