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Letters

To send a letter to the Guardian, email guardian.letters@theguardian.com – to send one to the Observer, email observer.letters@observer.co.uk

  • (FILES) This file photo taken on March 18, 2011 shows a woman, suffering from Alzheimer's disease, walking in a corridor in a retirement house in Angervilliers, eastern France. For decades now, soaring population growth and ageing rates have been forecast to ignite a global explosion of Alzheimer's, the memory- and freedom-robbing disease afflicting mainly 65-plussers. But an unexpected, and hopeful, trend may be emerging. / AFP PHOTO / Sébastien BOZONSEBASTIEN BOZON/AFP/Getty Images

    ‘The grief and loss is hard to bear’: the cruelty of Alzheimer’s disease

  • Durham Castle overlooking the River Wear

    For better and worse, Durham’s student population has an impact on locals

  • Children playing in puddles in the Gorbals district of Glasgow in 1969.

    As children, we roamed free. What has changed?

  • Keir Starmer's cabinet

    Rethink the visual representation of women in the press

  • Why testosterone is so important for women during menopause

  • Mistruths we’re told about British history

  • Brief letters
    Another day, another abhorrent brutality in Gaza

  • Goldsmiths’ redundancy plan shows a lack of commitment to Black British literature

  • HMP Chelmsford

    James Timpson is a sign of hope for a rational prisons policy

    Letters: Readers on the mammoth task facing the new prisons minister to reform the criminal justice system
  • Rescue workers forming a chain to move debris, in an effort to reach children trapped in Pantglas Junior School, at Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil, Glamorgan, after it was engulfed by a sliding mountain of slag.

    My father’s role in investigating Aberfan – and the sight he could never forget

    Letter: Ruth Rising remembers seeing her father crying at the kitchen table after witnessing children being dug out of the remains of the destroyed school in Wales
    • Joe Biden’s continuing candidacy is no joke

    • Who pockets the proceeds of £75 tours of Buckingham Palace?

    • Brief letters
      England knocking on heaven’s door at the Euros

  • Boris Johnson waving on the steps of 10 Downing Street, on 24 July 2019 after becoming prime minister.

    What Labour should do now to clean up politics and restore public trust

  • A voter carrying his passport along with his poll card, as he walks to a polling station

    The Tories’ voter ID rules are anti-democratic. Labour must scrap them

  • Ted Heath and Margaret Thatcher in 1998; they stood against each other for the Conservative party leadership in 1975.

    Don’t leave the Tory leadership decision in the hands of party members

  • Joel Snape working out, doing the ‘crab hold’ isometric exercise.

    Brief letters
    Now that’s not what I call a lazy journalist

  • Group of eight teen friends on their phones in front of brick wall background.

    Youth clubs are vital. We can all help to revive them

    Letters: Readers respond to an editorial about the loss of council-run youth services as Tory cuts have bitten into budgets
  • Bricks and mortar

    How to access land to build more housing

    Letters: Ray Corbett suggests repealing the Land Compensation Act, while Prof Andrew Fraser wants to rake back vast areas owned by hereditary peers. Plus a letter from Bea Rogers
  • Doctor in scrubs

    Bold ideas, not just funding, are key to fixing the NHS

    Letter: Dr Kevin Fox on what Wes Streeting should focus on to tackle the crisis in the health service
About 52,884 results for Letters
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