Finished copy of my new novel has arrived. Pub date 14 May. I began it in 2019 but was interrupted by Ian Fleming, since when events in the US have come to mimic the plot.
An immigrant surgeon has just given me a knee replacement, an immigrant nurse took my blood, an immigrant nurse took my X-rays, an immigrant physio helped me to exercise, an immigrant cook fed me. I would be nowhere and nothing without immigrants. Thank you to all of them.
This interview is devastating. Kennedy comes across as vain, narcissistic, ignorant, boastful, stupid, voraciously unread, with the certainties of an over-privileged ex-heroin junkie who is fatally addicted to himself.
In almost my last conversation with John le Carre, he talked of Johnson, whose actions had driven him to seek Irish citizenship. "Without being too dramatic, he is almost evil. He doesn’t seem to care about the consequences, which is a primary qualification for psychopathy."
Does anyone feel queasy about Angela Rayner's resignation? Her breach of code seems small beer when set against the Lord Bamford-sized breweries of Boris Johnson, Michelle Mone, Nadhim Zahawi etc., etc., etc
"I think we're in the most severe constitutional crisis involving a PM I can remember... the great debaser in modern times.. the first law-breaker to occupy the premiership... the Queen's First Minister is beyond doubt a rogue prime minister." Peter Hennessy on #BBCR4
Happy Father’s Day to my 94-year-old dad, seen here last night before a dinner at Trinity, his old Oxford college. He had rooms on the top floor directly behind him, 75 years ago.
An advanced copy has arrived. Only another author knows the density of this moment. To hold four years of your life in your hand, reduced to a book - in this case the first authorised life of Ian Fleming since 1966.
My 92-year old father in the incomparable quad at All Souls, on his way to dine last night with the Marshall Foch Professor of French. He’s one of the oldest living Oxford Modern Languages graduates, surviving his friend David Cornwell (John le Carre), who was in the year below.
The courage of William Wragg, the fidelity of Boris Johnson, the intelligence of Jonathan Gullis, the integrity, professionalism and accountability of Rishi Sunak, and so it goes, on and on and on and on.
Fry is right. Brexit ruined Britain, the Conservative Party, our sense of humour, our relations with our closest neighbours, our sense of optimism, our confidence, our culture, our finances, our sense of nationality, our place in the world - basically everything really.
Brexit ruined Britain, the Conservative Party, our sense of humour, our relations with our closest neighbours, our sense of optimism, our confidence, our culture, our finances, our sense of nationality, our place in the world - basically everything really.
"As O’Brien writes, not only has Brexit been a disaster; much of Britain’s infrastructure now appears to be broken. We are indeed led by donkeys. The press is frequently a disgrace. In public life, facts no longer matter. Shame is extinct."