The Guardian Weekly magazine is a round-up of the world news, opinion and long reads that have shaped the week. Inside, the past seven days' most memorable stories are reframed with striking photography and insightful companion pieces, all handpicked from The Guardian and The Observer.
Eyewitness China
Global report • Headlines from the last seven days
United Kingdom
Reader’s eyewitness
SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENT
‘You gotta let people know who you are’ On the campaign trail with Kamala Harris • With election day closing in, the Democratic nominee launched an intense drive to tell her story in her quest for the presidency. David Smith joined her on Air Force Two
Too close to call? • Trump’s edge in the polls does not necessarily mean he will win
Spotlight • ‘They take care of us’ Shias put their faith in Hezbollah
Fear of being forgotten • Despair in Gaza as focus shifts away
How the Kremlin is trying to hijack an EU referendum
Ballot boxing • Stage set for a battle of the political dynasties
Eyewitness Morocco
Labour pledges have left chancellor boxed in for budget • Frustration grows among ministers forced to delay plans until after Rachel Reeves speech
Tributes paid to ex-Scottish first minister Alex Salmond
Forecasters targeted as conspiracy theories swirl
Road to recovery • Reeling Florida counts the cost of double hurricane strike
A children’s hospital with its own healing properties • From patient ‘cottages’ to walls designed for scribbling on, the Kinderspital in Zurich is a child-friendly miracle
‘Coolest job on earth’: new team for penguin post office
Addis adagio • Pianist plays a key role in musical adventure
Play chess against Mo Salah? I would love that • The football-mad world No 1 on the players he’d like to face, why he feels he has never played the perfect game – and his retirement plans
True superstar • Nadal calling time on career brings an end to golden era
Province’s blueprint for sharing land with First Nations
After the fall • He was known for taboo-busting, transgressive stories about identity, sexuality and belonging. Then Hanif Kureishi broke his neck. Despite a life-changing injury, he’s still every bit as provocative
Waste not, want not • Every informed observer agrees that food waste and loss must be reduced if we are to feed all humans. What’s stopping us?
Opinion Jonathan Freedland • It’s our gravest humanitarian crisis – but almost nobody seems to care
Alexander Hurst • Tipping culture is annoying, unfair and, worst of all, American
Marina Hyde • Hurricanes exist in our world. But in Musk’s version, who can say?
The GuardianView • Pope Francis’s mission is compromised by the refusal to ordain women
Opinion Letters
Culture What’s the story, Trevor Noah? • On the publication of his first children’s book, the comedian and presenter answers questions from fellow authors on Trump, his mother … and rollercoasters
Dark notes The new age of the movie musical • From murderers to apocalypse-escapers, gender re-assignment to political prisoners, new films are pushing the genre into sombre territory
Iceland in her veins • Satu Rämö’s mindful cop Hildur has caused a ‘Nordic blue’ publishing sensation, but it’s her outsider’s perspective that taps her adopted island’s psyche
Reviews
Changing places • Transformation, clarity and joy are to be found in this collection of Margaret Atwood’s work spanning six decades
Adventure capital • With bravura brilliance, the Watchmen author conjures up a hyperreal fugitive city
BOOKS OF THE MONTH • The best recent...