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Reform councillor’s boast about removing ‘trans-ideological’ books from children’s library sections falls flat

1 day ago
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A boast by a Reform UK councillor that he ensured the removal of “trans-ideological material and books” from the children’s section of his county’s libraries has fallen flat after it emerged that no such material ever existed there.Paul Webb, the cabinet member for communities at Kent council, whose portfolio covers libraries, posted a video to X in which he said he had been “recently contacted by a concerned member of the public who found trans-ideological material and books in the children’s section of one of our libraries”.He said: “I’ve looked into this and this was the case.I’ve today issued instructions for them all to be removed from the children’s section of any of our libraries.“They do not belong in the children’s section of our libraries.

Our children do not need to be told they were born in the wrong body,So from today this will stop,”Webb’s message was retweeted by Linden Kemkaran, the council leader, who in her own message, dotted with fire emojis, said: “Another victory for #commonsenseinKent my brilliant cabinet member Cllr Paul Webb has just got this trans material REMOVED from the children’s sections of all Kent’s libraries,Telling children they’re in the ‘wrong body’ is wrong and simply unacceptable,”Kemkaran’s tweet included a photo of a book called The Autistic Trans Guide to Life on what looked to be a library display shelf, next to a sign about Pride events.

Some local residents expressed doubt at the narrative, with the local news website the Kent Current noting that according to the county’s library system, all five copies of the book were kept in the adult nonfiction section, while the photograph appeared to be of a display at the entrance of Herne Bay library, not its children’s section.When asked about this by the Guardian, Kent council said it could confirm that no books aimed at adults about transgender issues had been held in the children’s sections of Kent libraries.It confirmed that the complaint was about a book on show near a library entrance which had since been “relocated to a section that is unlikely to be visited by children”.In a statement the Reform-led council said: “Kent county council have confirmed that children are not and will not be exposed to adult transgender literature in our libraries.“Staff at the county’s 99 libraries have been asked to ensure that books are always stocked in age-appropriate categories and that no adult literature makes its way into areas specifically aimed at children, or where children will be selecting books, such as the public welcome displays.

“It follows feedback from a resident who spotted a transgender book aimed at adults in a public display at the entrance of one library in Kent,The book has since been relocated to a section that is unlikely to be visited by children,”
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Kae Tempest: Self Titled review – the rhythms in his lyrics are still so distinct

On a track called Bless the Bold Future, Kae Tempest wrestles with the urge to bring children into a world beset by catastrophe; the landscape of the 39-year-old’s fifth album Self Titled is indeed characterised by pain, anxiety and suffering. On Hyperdistillation, a man dies sleeping rough outside uninhabited penthouses as NHS backlogs threaten lives, and the ravey Diagnoses presents mental health issues as “the right response to a world gone wrong,” while Statue in the Square’s doomy grime reckons with a climate of transphobia (Tempest came out as non-binary in 2020 and earlier this year revealed his gender transition).And yet, there is something irrepressibly joyous about this album, which is essentially a collection of love letters: to the trans community, to the Londoner’s home town, to his partner. Tempest’s ability to imbue societal decay and personal torment with strange beauty, via lyricism honed on the performance poetry scene, is unparalleled, and his roots in the art form are still very much evident in his earnest, rhythmic delivery.Sometimes, the actual music struggles to keep up and fit in

1 day ago
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Mark Gatiss: ‘What does Benedict Cumberbatch smell like? Strawberries’

As the writer and actor unveils his new detective show Bookish, he sits down for a chat about famous sleuths, the odds of a return to Royston Vasey and what it’s like working with Tom CruiseMark Gatiss arrived on our screens playing a variety of grotesques in The League of Gentlemen: mysterious butcher Hilary Briss; palm-reader Mama Lazarou; the buck-toothed, mullet-sporting job-seeker Mickey Michaels; and many more. He co-founded and co-wrote the BBC comedy with Steve Pemberton, Reece Shearsmith and Jeremy Dyson after meeting them at college, and has teamed up with Doctor Who showrunner Steven Moffat to write and cameo in numerous episodes of the Time Lord drama, before the pair created the smash-hit update of Sherlock, in which Gatiss also appeared as Holmes’s brother Mycroft, and another BBC series, Dracula. If that weren’t enough, Gatiss has also popped up in Game of Thrones, Operation Mincemeat and the last two Mission: Impossible films.Now he’s back in a new detective drama Bookish, in which he plays a crime-solving book emporium owner. We caught up to chat about why he loves the 1940s; whether there will be more Sherlock, Dracula or League of Gentlemen; and what he’d like to do with Tom Cruise

3 days ago
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To Kill a Mockingbird: a call to compassion that’s more urgent than ever

It’s impossible to watch Robert Mulligan’s 1962 adaptation of Harper Lee’s great novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, and not be moved by Gregory Peck’s performance as Atticus Finch, a small-town American lawyer with an unfailing moral compass. Light years from the archetypal legal eagle, he radiates good old-fashioned decency, espousing tolerance and compassion that sadly feels almost passe amid the Sturm und Drang of the current world.“You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view,” goes one of Finch’s great lines, sourced from Lee’s book. In perhaps the film’s most memorable scene, Peck deliverers a grand courtroom monologue, declaring that “all men are created equal”, imploring the jury to “in the name of God, believe Tom Robinson,” the black man accused of raping a white woman – a crime he didn’t commit.When I think about this film, my mind recalls that monologue in vivid colour – even though it’s shot in monochrome

4 days ago
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My night at the museum … for an ‘adult sleepover’, with lots of dinosaurs and no kids allowed

Museums around the world are opening up for grownups wanting to explore by torchlight and sleep among exhibits. Clem Bastow heads to Melbourne Museum to try one outGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailIt’s about 1.30am and I’ve just heard a spooky noise – the sort of noise that would usually send me shooting out of bed with a torch and baseball bat to investigate my no doubt impending doom. Fortunately, on this occasion I am not alone in my flat but surrounded by 39 other nerds sleeping (relatively) soundly in the Dinosaur Walk at Melbourne Museum. The source of the noise is a nearby tawny frogmouth

4 days ago
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‘Someone compared it to Bohemian Rhapsody’: Wookie on making UK garage classic Battle

‘We added a level of sophistication to garage. When we were trying to get it on the radio, one station said it was too intelligent and they wouldn’t play it’People say Battle reminds them of some really good years for Britain as a country. We were entering a new millennium, everyone was running their own business, making money and the underground record industry was thriving. I wanted to do a UK garage version of Southern Freeez, by the 80s UK funk band Freeez. Initially, Battle was going to be another instrumental, and then Lain, the singer, came in the room and goes: “Let me put something on this

5 days ago
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Manchester Museum asks visitors if Egyptian woman’s body should be taken off display

One of Europe’s leading museums is asking visitors if it should continue to display the body of an ancient Egyptian woman 200 years after it was brought to the UK by cotton merchants, as it “decolonises” some of its most famous exhibits.Manchester Museum, which in May was named 2025’s European museum of the year, is running a consultation on the future of Asru, a woman who lived in Thebes, the ancient city in the location of modern-day Luxor, 2,700 years ago.A plaque at the museum asks: “Should we continue to display the body of Asru?”, inviting visitors to submit answers in a postbox underneath.It adds: “Asru’s mummified body was unwrapped at the Manchester Natural History Society in April 1825. She has regularly been on display for the two centuries since

6 days ago
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Leaders of Russia and China snub Brics summit in sign group’s value may be waning

about 14 hours ago
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Trump threatens 17% tariffs on food and farm produce exports from Europe

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Skirting the issue: Designer dress goes missing from Bezos-Sánchez wedding

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Fears AI factcheckers on X could increase promotion of conspiracy theories

3 days ago
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Navarro ends Krejcikova’s Wimbledon defence while Andreeva marches on

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England v India: second men’s cricket Test, day four – as it happened

about 4 hours ago