The bard celebrates two other fine practitioners of the art, and laments a lost brewer
One Kensington: Food Halls, Food Banks and Grenfell: Inside the Most Unequal Borough in Britain
by Emma Dent Coad
Quercus £20
IF THE politics of inequality in contemporary Britain are shaped by decisions made in Parliament, it is at the local level that policy choices weave the resulting fabric of injustice.
Local authorities represent the trenches in which the haves resist the advances of the have nots in a grinding attrition of class warfare, where the most petty but also the most tragic decisions affecting lives are made.
A textbook battlefield that has claimed its fair share of victims in Britain’s class struggle — not least the avoidable deaths at Grenfell Tower — is Kensington and Chelsea, a London borough routinely described as the most unequal in the country.
YVETTE WILLIAMS and JOE DELANEY dissect the institutional dawdling that rubbed salt into the Grenfell open wounds prolonging the agony of survivors
On the 121st anniversary of communist Claudia Jones’s birth ROGER McKENZIE looks at political events that shaped her, and those she helped shape
DAVID HORSLEY reminds us of the roots and staying power of one of the most iconic festivals around


