Georgina Godwin sets the tone for the weekend, Simon Brooke reviews the papers and Monocle’s editor in chief Andrew Tuck is back with his weekend column.
Category Archives: Stories
Previews: The New York Review Of Books – May 26

Geoffrey O’Brien – Schemes Gone Awry
Richard Wilbur’s translations of Molière, now in the Library of America, have a fluency that goes beyond meter and rhyme to encompass textures of speech and movements of thought.
Molière: The Complete Richard Wilbur Translations
Fintan O’Toole – Our Hypocrisy on War Crimes
The US’s history of moral evasiveness around wartime atrocities undermines the very institution that might eventually bring Putin and his subordinates to justice: the International Criminal Court.
Cover Preview: Decanter Magazine – June 2022 Issue
Inside the June 2022 issue of Decanter Magazine:
FEATURES
- Finding value in Burgundy’s Côte de Nuits Charles Curtis MW
- Spätburgunder Caro Maurer MW
- NZ Pinot Noir: 20 premium wines Selected by Decanter’s Tina Gellie
- Muscadet: the crus communaux Beverley Blanning MW
- The language of tasting notes Chris Losh on the good – and bad
Sailing Views: ‘Rainbow’ – A Spectacular J Class Yacht
Rainbow exudes a sense of grace and power, but is a thoroughly modern recreation of its 1930s namesake. Launched in 2012 by Holland Jachtbouw, she faintly resembles the 1934 J Class America’s Cup winner. Because she mixes classic design with modern technology, this new-generation Rainbow packs more pedigree into her 140-foot aluminum hull than most other modern sailing yachts combined.
VIEWS: JUNE 2022 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC UK ‘TRAVELLER’

The June issue of National Geographic Traveller (UK) is out now. The cover story this month focuses on Scandinavia Denmark, Norway and Sweden — where nature throws out the rulebook. Shaped by the elements and ruled by the seasons, this is a region not only bound by cultural ties, but by a love for epic outdoor adventures. From oyster safaris on Denmark’s dramatic shoreline and wilderness camping in Norwegian national parks to learning about Sámi culture in Swedish Lapland, these are the ultimate Scandinavian experiences.
Elsewhere in the issue:
South Africa: Safari projects are bouncing back after the pandemic in the country’s wild north east.
Portugal: Historic vines and traditional local sweets await on a journey through the Douro Valley.
Mauritius: Meet the conservationists preserving the islands’ extraordinary natural treasures.
Preview: Times Literary Supplement – May 6, 2022
Times Literary Supplement, May 6, 2022 – This week’s @TheTLS, featuring James Fenton on Volume IV of John Richardson’s Picasso biography; @joemoransblog on the “Premonitions Bureau”; @JuliusKrein on the American Right; @MElizabethLowry on William Kentridge; @AnaAliciaGarza on James Agee – and more
Views: Discover Germany, Switzerland & Austria Magazine – May 2022 Issue
Previews: Art In America Magazine – May 2022 Issue
‘Art In America’ May 2022 – Each May, Art in America brings our readers a sampling of “new talent,” with a special focus on artists whose practice makes them stand out in a sea of competitors vying for attention. “Practice” is very much the operative word here: at a time when many artists are becoming known more for their social-media presence than for their creative endeavors, and when careers are bolstered more by the market than by critical attention, the editors, critics, and curators who contributed to our selection this year remained centered on what matters. As you’ll discover in these pages, the artists showcased are all contributing in some resonant way to the ongoing dialogue around art, aesthetics, and the culture at large, from Alexander Si, who turns an anthropological lens on the culture of whiteness; to Suneil Sanzgiri, whose films engage with anticolonialism; to Laurie Kang, who treats photography as a form of installation art (and who has contributed a compelling print to this issue); to the other notable talents featured. With this issue, we continue a tradition developed over more than a century of this magazine: writing art history as it is being made.
Preview: The New Yorker Magazine – May 9, 2022
Kadir Nelson’s “Hang Time”
The artist discusses basketball, painting, and teamwork.
By Françoise Mouly, Art by Kadir NelsonMay 2, 2022
For the second year in a row, basketball fans in New York have felt the sting of disappointed dreams. The Brooklyn Nets are, in the words of the staff writer Vinson Cunningham, “a theoretical super-team, not a fully realized force,” and they crashed out of the playoffs in the first round, after losing to the Boston Celtics in “a sweep that even the worst Nets pessimist wouldn’t have predicted.” And yet, on the city’s many courts, the game goes on. We spoke to Kadir Nelson about celebrating a beloved urban pastime.
Cover Preview: Landscape Photography – May 2022

Dusk to Dawn Landscape Photography
Expand your landscape photography potential by shooting long after sundown and on through the night. As Mark Hamblin explains, photography requires …
A Guide To Infrared Landscapes
Infrared photography can bring a whole new dimension to your landscape photography, but where should you start? Michael Pilkington has a few …
A Guide to Filters for Landscape Photography
Mark Bauer helped us put together a comprehensive guide to filters for Landscape Photography and explains why we still need them …
Photographing The Northern Lights
Northern Lights or Aurora Borealis. Do we have what it takes to capture this breathtaking phenomenon? Lee Pengelly shares some valuable advice on how to …