New releases from Joe Wilkes, Honey and the Bear, and Hannah James and Toby Kuhn
I ONCE shared a mic with Alistair Findlay, who's recently published a memoir on his four decades as a social worker.
I envied him. He played for Hibs as a young man and he could speak football to a Scottish audience. You could make the case that any Scottish poet, if they are to speak to a working-class public, needs to speak fitba’.
Findlay was describing how it feels when the “committee men,” who favour “showy bastards,” select the team. Like a shanked clearance lofted up from the pitch one of his phrases, about when the wrong guys are in charge and you feel your “fate in numpty hands,” stuck in my mind and attached itself to life at large.
Pep Guardiola leaving City marks the end of an era of peak modern football, says JAMES NALTON
Two inspring books — that’s your New Year’s musing from me on January 2 2026
Working-class women lead the fight for fair work and equitable pay and against sexual harassment, the rise of the far right and years of failed austerity policies, writes ROZ FOYER
We are demanding action from our politicians to deliver justice, fairness and decency throughout our communities – join us, says ROZ FOYER


