Neil D.A. Stewart

Shades of Alasdair Gray

Shades of Alasdair Gray

by Neil D.A. Stewart

Visionary author and artist and Glasgow cultural icon, Gray's artwork is the subject of a retrospective at Kelvingrove Art Gallery

Fukushima, phantasmagoria | Pierre Huyghe at Hauser & Wirth, London

Fukushima, phantasmagoria | Pierre Huyghe at Hauser & Wirth, London

by Neil D.A. Stewart

"What is under there? It must be a monkey – or maybe a lemur? Even a sloth? Is it all an elaborate piece of CGI?"

Texting while walking in China

Texting while walking in China

by Neil D.A. Stewart

"I don’t like having to dodge out the way of phone-possessed imbeciles any more than I would like to be run over by cars – what’s why I don’t walk in the street"

Review: <em>All My Puny Sorrows</em> by Miriam Toews

Review: All My Puny Sorrows by Miriam Toews

by Neil D.A. Stewart

"I laughed and I cried all the way through All My Puny Sorrows, a comedy about suicide"

All the stars | Three star dining in San Sebastián

All the stars | Three star dining in San Sebastián

by Neil D.A. Stewart

Which should make your bucket list: Akelare, Arzak or Martin Berasategui?

Other A Voces, other rooms

Other A Voces, other rooms

by Neil D.A. Stewart

Columbus Circle or Madison? Neil Stewart reviews both A Voces, Marlon Abela's celebrated, super smart New York Italian restaurants

The art of writing in cafés

The art of writing in cafés

by Neil D.A. Stewart

Author Neil D.A. Stewart on creating characters with caffeine, from NoMad to Melbourne

Full Japanese | The best ryokans in Japan

Full Japanese | The best ryokans in Japan

by Neil D.A. Stewart

From a fear of natto to abalone murder: the best ryokans in Japan

Fera | From Cartmel to Claridge’s

Fera | From Cartmel to Claridge’s

by Neil D.A. Stewart

Fine dining goes commando: Simon Rogan's return to London looks very different from his Cartmel operations. But, as Neil Stewart discovers, the taste of Fera is still very familiar. And there are still no tablecloths

Melbourne’s first dessert-themed hotel | Review: Adelphi Hotel, Melbourne

Melbourne’s first dessert-themed hotel | Review: Adelphi Hotel, Melbourne

by Neil D.A. Stewart

"Something was prickling at me as I went down for dinner after my dip. It was partly that, in a monumental lapse of taste, the Adelphi has christened its regenerated restaurant Om Nom, a name which causes my teeth to itch as I type it"