All Good Things Come to an End. What About Bad Things?
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© Karsten Moran for The New York Times
Follow live for the latest UK pre-order updates from The Game Collection, Amazon and more
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Saigo pounced in a play-offa fter Jutanugarn had fluffed a chip from the edge of the 18th green
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Contestants include ‘GMB’ host Kate Garraway, Olympian Tom Daley and comedian Alan Carr
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Kim Kardashian thought she may never see her family again when she was violently robbed in a Paris apartment. Nine years later, she may finally be served justice
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The platform was, of course, set by Jürgen Klopp. Arne Slot made note of that through the medium of song.
This is a fun thought from Robert Winiker: “Would it be an idea to stage a joint celebration with the title win five years ago, which was cancelled due to the pandemic? With Jürgen Klopp and the players included?”
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© Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA
De Niro lost out on the huge role to James Caan
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If you’re looking for a recipe for investing success, the key ingredient is patience
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Deas won bronze for Team GB at Pyeongchang 2018 behind teammate and gold medallist Lizzy Yarnold
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‘I feel free,’ actor said
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Daisy Lester checks in
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Phoenix Ross’s But Bigger series on TikTok and Instagram rakes in millions of views
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City have made several uncharacteristic mistakes in the transfer market in recent windows but Mateo Kovacic’s command over Sunday’s FA Cup semi-final showed why he isn’t one of them
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“Cortisol belly” and “cortisol face” might sound catchy, but they reduce incredibly complex biological processes into bite-sized insecurities
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Several stars could be spotted running in the sunny capital on Sunday
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Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news
Britain’s stock market is on track to match its longest run of gains in eight years.
The FTSE 100 index has risen by 20 points, or 0.25%, in early trading to 8436 points. That puts the blue-chip shares index on track for its 11th daily rise in a row, a record last set in December 2019 after Boris Johnson’s election win.
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A new study claims social media is responsible for encouraging people to interact with sharks
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Arne Slot led the team to the top-flight title in his first year at Anfield as Liverpool won the Premier League for a second time in five years
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Comments from foreign minister Sergei Lavrov about ‘ownership’ follow suggestions from Trump that Ukraine could cede Crimea
Russia claimed it was ready to conduct talks with Ukraine ‘without any preconditions’, AFP said state media reported, after US president Donald Trump questioned Russian leader Vladimir Putin’s willingness to halt the three-year offensive.
But then in other comments, reported almost simultaneously by AFP, the country’s most senior diplomat said that its claims over five Ukrainian regions including Crimea were “imperative” to talks aimed at resolving the conflict.
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© Photograph: AP
Children's toys were visible amongst rubble in Yemen after Houthi rebels said Monday (28 April) that US airstrikes targeted its capital overnight.
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‘It was not about me – it was about my country,’ ‘Austin Powers’ actor said
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Experts will highlight childhood verbal abuse as ‘the most prevalent form of child maltreatment’
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‘Not even passed the opening credits and The Last Of Us already has me in my feels,’ said one fan
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Authorities warn of potential hazards as steam-driven eruption triggers ashfall and increased seismic activity at Bulusan
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The Government must take action to stop abuse, Children’s Commissioner says
Kyiv has rejected Moscow's formal authority over Crimea
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New details about Oscar-winner’s health issues have been shared in final report
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Netanyahu’s office says Israel ‘will not allow Hezbollah to grow stronger’
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Arne Slot’s side sealed a second Premier League triumph with victory over Tottenham
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Nicole Keefe shares a mobile home with her four-legged friend McCartney
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Beyoncé's mother Tina Knowles was visibly emotional as she gave details of her breast cancer diagnosis during Thursday's (24 April) episode of Loose Women.
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There’s a crude fascination in seeing the contents of a literary celebrity’s therapy sessions, but we’re surely invading her privacy
Motherhood is a state of continuous loss that is meant to culminate when the dependent baby becomes an independent adult. Joan Didion survived this, as many mothers have, by keeping constant watch over her adopted daughter Quintana, fearing “swimming pools, high-tension wires, lye under the sink, aspirin in the medicine cabinet”. She also survived it, as fewer mothers have, by writing obsessively about the loss she feared. In her arid, fevered masterpiece Play It As It Lays, published when Quintana was four, the narrator’s breakdown is precipitated by her daughter’s long-term hospitalisation with an unnamed mental disorder. A Book of Common Prayer is about the disappearance of the protagonist’s criminal revolutionary daughter. “Marin was loose in the world and could leave it at any time and Charlotte would have no way of knowing” – a description that could be applied to motherhood in general.
The coddling failed. Quintana drank to self-medicate for anxiety and by 33 she was an alcoholic whose therapist wanted her mother to participate in the treatment. And so in 1999 Didion, who had hitherto protected her inner life with her trademark dark glasses and stylish sentences with their wilfully “impenetrable polish”, found herself seeing Freudian analyst and psychiatrist Roger MacKinnon. Now her notes on their sessions have been, in my view misguidedly, gathered from her archive and packaged as a book.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Dorothy Hong/Dorothy Hong (commissioned)
© Photograph: Dorothy Hong/Dorothy Hong (commissioned)