FRONTLINE: A BROADSHEET SUMMER 2009 ISSUE
CONTENT:
- Mr Blair: Was Jesus Wrong? If so, You Must be Right | Peter Stanford on Tony Blair's Catholicism
- Looted Britain | Frontline on a disastrous economic experiment
- From the Frontline: Pure Kashmir | Muzamil Jaleel on Pakistan's Fight Against Jihad
- Zalkan Wars: Traitors Unmasked or Allies Betrayed | The future for peacekeeping in Kosovo
- J-War-Ez | Julian Cardona on fear and death in Mexico
- The MPs We Deserve? | Martin Bell on the return of British sleaze
- A Rendition of Injustice | Clive Stafford Smith on Anglo American torture
- Britain on Your Back | David Hoffman on the police and databases
- Brain Damage | Baroness Susan Greenfield issues a warning
- My Generation | George Sotiropoulos behind the Greek protests
- Books and Film: Bitterly Italy | Ed Vulliamy on Italian artists fighting the Mafia
- Film: A Twist of Fate | John Carlin and his Hollywood coincidence
- Music: Maestro | Robert Fox questions Gergiev's political allies
- Sport: Paying the Penalty | Simon Freeman on the demise of football managers
- Gobama: Frontline's resident president by Stephen Daly
- We Have Lost... | Those Frontline will miss
Subscription is priced at £20 per year for four issues or £5 for one issue including postage.
Subscribe now
Log in to subscribe to the broadsheet
FRONTLINE: A BROADSHEET aims to be a high-quality, quarterly publication, in some ways radical; in others resurrecting traditions lost from the British market.
FRONTLINE will address major events and themes in international and domestic British politics, culture, conflict and lifestyle.
FRONTLINE will be political, but party-politically-allergic, irreverent and iconoclastic in equal measure.
FRONTLINE will offer international coverage in the best traditions of the Frontline Club and its membership, which includes some of the most esteemed reporters in the world.
FRONTLINE has been put together by a team of Frontline Club members whose work is entirely voluntary.
At last. What's been missing from the British press: thoughtful, progressive analysis of our society, with the space to spell it out; a huge blast of fresh air. - Phillip Knightley
The broadsheet is designed by Sarah Douglas and Lee Belcher.