One American
in London on Election Night was reported as saying that she favoured Walt Disney as Presi- dent and Harpo Marx as Vice-President.
The Spectator has views on American politics, too—and on British politics, for that matter. This is a typical week, for instance—with Ian Gilmour reporting on the American result, and Roy Jenkins writing about the Labour Party's future, if that is the right word. Nor do we neglect other parts of the world where they produce more politics than they are able to consume locally; we have regula rreports from Darsie Gillie in Paris, from Richard Rovere in New York, from Michael Adams all over the Middle East. And home politics are covered by outside con- tributors, by well-informed, plain-spoken edi- torials, and by the sardonic pencil of Trog, our political cartoonist. (Note from sub-editor—we have those too: can a pencil be sardonic?) Our coverage of books is unrivalled. Kingsley Amis, Evelyn Waugh, Dan Jacobson, N. F. Simpson, William Golding, John Mortimer, Frank Kermode, E. M. Forster, Penelope Gilliatt, Doris Lessing—it begins to sound like the roll-call of defence witnesses in the Lady Chatterley case (did you read Bernard Levin's report of the trial?)—but it is in fact just a small selection of the names that have appeared and appear regularly in the books pages.
The entertainments, the woman's world (Katharine Whitehorn commanding), hints on every variety of subject that can be squeezed under Leslie Adrian's famous 'Consuming Interest' heading, the city page of Nicholas Davenport—all these goodies are to be found every week in the Spectator.
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