Essays
The possibility of post-traumatic growth
29th April 2020 / New Statesman
Can you teach the art of leadership?
February 2020 / New Statesman
If Brexit is an English revolt what will happen to England after Brexit?
27th November 2019 / New Statesman
A musician of extraordinary depths
27th February 2019 / New Statesman
Not since Conrad had a novelist so completely absorbed himself in the shifting complexities of his age, or written more sharply about the dark places of the world.
13th August 2018 / New Statesman
How the World Cup and Gareth Southgate’s young, diverse team reawakened a sense of progressive English nationalism
4th July 2018 / New Statesman
The three men had been drinking for several hours by the time they arrived at The Stow shopping centre in Harlow. It was approaching midnight on a warm bank holiday weekend towards the end of August. What happened next would reverberate around the world ...
1st April 2018 / Granta
Richard Beard seeks to uncover the truth behind a long-ago family tragedy
11th May 2017 / New Statesman
What happened to the best and the brightest of New Labour?
15th September 2016 / New Statesman
The dominant tone of English discourse is one of regret
20th August 2016 / Financial Times
Was it more fun being young in the 1980s?
13th June 2016 / The Times
The private anguish, and public success of David Cornwell.
31st October 2015 / The Financial Times
The English writer is revealed in all his fierce integrity in a new collection of journalism.
6th December 2014 / Financial Times
The final days of the Scottish referendum campaign
13th September 2014 / New Statesman
As a student, her urgent writing about her generation had already reached a wider audience. Her death, days after graduation, lends her words extra power.
20th June 2014 / Financial Times
New Statesman editor Jason Cowley speaks to Anthony Little, headmaster of Eton College, about the role of public schools, the new crop of Etonians ruling public life and Gove's education reforms.
8th May 2013 / New Statesman
We are missing a British writer to whom we can turn and learn from at moments of national consequence or crisis
19th April 2013 / Financial Times
Reporting from Tel Aviv and Ramallah as the latest rash of violence began to sweep Israel, Jason Cowley finds a nation implacably set on a course of war . . . and increasingly disconnected from the world.
22nd November 2012 / New Statesman
After the war, Harlow was supposed to offer east Londoners the chance of a fresh start and a stab at the good life. This month, it became the place where a suspicious fire killed six members of a Muslim family.
25th October 2012 / New Statesman
The Prime Minister's lack of originality.
4th July 2012 / New Statesman