How The Independent made a habit of reinventing modern journalism
Letter from the editor: From the beginning, right up to the end, the newspaper has been radical
Letter from the editor: From the beginning, right up to the end, the newspaper has been radical
The Lib Dems might have saved less money, but they might also have saved the Tories from themselves
These letters appear in the final print edition of The Independent, 26th March 2016
The Victorian era is to blame...
Leave Syria and Iraq, Palestine and Yemen in agony and the lure of violence at home or abroad edges up a notch each year
Sneakerheads Ibrahim Salha and Linda Sharkey round up their picks from the retailers to celebrate the shoes that changed the trainers game in 1987
Grace Dent wonders if life was better back when we were allowed a period in which we could stop trying
You need to snake your way to what's true, allow the words to discover passion, not passion dictate the words
Trying to get over your ex parter can be a lonley, gut-wrenching experience. Relate relationship counsellor Ammanda Major explains how to make the process as pain-free as possible.
We must develop new skills. The first is self-control – an ability to pause
If your ticket is drawn, you are called up to answer an incredibly difficult quiz question, and the jackpot is capped at £1,000
Alison is thinking about having children, but not getting into quite as many scrapes
By championing bikes to such a ludicrous level, as his "legacy" project, Boris is as blinkered as the car lobby and lorry drivers
This Budget has further proved that the Chancellor's spending cuts are a political choice and not an economic necessity
Sleep easy on a dreamily comfortable, built-to-last bed
Sleep easy on a dreamily comfortable, built-to-last bed
The EU was banning workplace discrimination against LGBT people 'back when Boris Johnson was writing that gay marriage could lead to three men and a dog getting married'
Soak up some spring sunshine and strong beer during "little Oktoberfest" season, say Simon Calder
Membership of Labour is falling for the first time since the 2015 general election. Young supporters like me are growing tired of the hysteria surrounding Corbyn
It's not just poets who speak for the nation
A study revealing that children as young as seven have been engaged in 'sexting' should be a wake-up call
There is no disguising that the continent faces a number of existential challenges
Richard II is the first in a four-part series, followed by the two Henry IV plays and Henry V
The ground Richard invites us to sit on – to 'tell sad stories of the death of kings' – is common ground to all
Trust in traditional politics is low, and institutions are brittle, but community groups are springing up all over the place