Mark Bould: The Anthropocene Unconscious review - climate anxiety is written everywhere

★★★ MARK BOULD: THE ANTHROPOCENE UNCONSCIOUS Climate anxiety is written everywhere

Foreboding is never far away, even in our trashiest entertainment

Our everyday lives, if we’re fortunate, may be placid, even contented. A rewarding job, for some; good eats; warm home; happy family; entertainment on tap. Yet, even for the privileged, awareness of impending change – probably disaster – intrudes.

Our entertainment is saturated with foreboding. In the Anthropocene, the hard-to-define era when the human collective has planet-wide effects that will endure for aeons, any new fictional world bears traces of the ways our real world is being made, or unmade.

Our Future in Your Hands, Peckham School Choirs, Multi-Story Orchestra, Stark, Bold Tendencies review - blazing community epic

★★★★ OUR FUTURE IN YOUR HANDS, PECKHAM SCHOOL CHOIRS, MULTI-STORY ORCHESTRA Kate Whitley's latest work involving local schoolchildren is a big symphonic eco-plea

Kate Whitley's latest work involving local schoolchildren is a big symphonic eco-plea

What a way for the Multi-Story Orchestra, conductor Christopher Stark and composer Kate Whitley to celebrate 10 years of pioneering activity in Peckham and beyond.

Album: Marina - Ancient Dreams in a Modern Land

★★★★ MARINA - ANCIENT DREAMS IN A MODERN LAND Best so far from re-energised pop star

Fifth album is the best so far from a re-energised, revitalised, newly mouthy pop star

The latest album from Marina Diamandis, her fifth, is a startling explosion of vim and attitude. It mingles speeding, wordy, indie-tinted dance-pop bangers, tilting at all manner of contemporary ills, with sudden moments of broken-hearted piano-led contemplation. When she last appeared two years ago, it was with the lengthy Love + Fear album, Paloma Faith-ish songs whose tastefulness masked real character.

Nichola Raihani: The Social Instinct review - the habits of co-operation

★★★ NICHOLA RAIHANI: THE SOCIAL INSTINCT A book that goes the way of most evolutionary psychology texts

A book that goes the way of most evolutionary psychology texts

An army on the move must be as disturbing as it is, on occasion, inspiring. In E.L. Doctorow’s startlingly good civil war novel The March, General Sherman’s column proceeds inexorably through the southern United States like a giant organism. It appears as “a great segmented body moving in contractions and dilations at a rate of 12 or 15 miles a day, a creature of 100,000 feet. It is tubular in its being and tentacled to the roads and bridges over which it travels.’'

Walden, Harold Pinter Theatre review – where’s the emotion?

★★★ WALDEN, HAROLD PINTER THEATRE Debut play about siblings, climate change and space travel is full of ideas - but where’s the emotion?

Debut play about siblings, climate change and space travel is full of ideas

There’s something definitely inspiring about producer Sonia Friedman’s decision to reopen one of her prime West End venues with a season, called RE:EMERGE, of three new plays. The first drama is American playwright Amy Berryman’s ambitious debut, Walden, and this will be followed later in June by Yasmin Joseph’s J’Ouvert and then in July by Joseph Charlton’s Anna X.

Josie Long, Brighton Festival 2021 review - giddy post-lockdown spin on pregnancy-based show

★★★ JOSIE LONG, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL 2021 Delayed for a year, Long's 2019 Edinburgh Fringe success finally makes it to Brighton

Delayed for a year, Long's 2019 Edinburgh Fringe success finally makes it to Brighton

Introduced by Brighton Festival 2021 Guest Director, poet Lemn Sissay, Josie Long, clad in blue denim dungarees and a black tee-shirt, initially hits the stage for a celebratory introduction. She’s here to perform her Tender show about pregnancy and childbirth, but this is her first show in well over a year, due to COVID-19, and she’s keen to say hello first. She’s excited and it’s contagious.