Download Margaret Thatcher: From Grantham to the Falklands: The Authorized Biography
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Margaret Thatcher: From Grantham to the Falklands: The Authorized Biography
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Amazon.com Review
Amazon Guest Review of “Margaret Thatcherâ€By Anne Applebaum Anne Applebaum is the author of several books, including Iron Curtain: The Crushing of Eastern Europe, a National Book Award finalist, and Gulag: A History, which won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction. She writes a column for The Washington Post and Slate, and is the Director of Political Studies at the Legatum Institute in London. She divides her time between Britain and Poland, where her husband, Radek Sikorski, serves as Foreign Minister. From the beginning she sounded different. She looked different too, particularly back when she had frizzy hair and wore too much jewelry… Much has happened since then. She became the Iron Lady, she became prime minister, she became a symbol to love or hate, she became an “ismâ€â€¦We all think we know what happened to her and why—but do we really? Moore’s great gift is his ability to make Thatcher’s story fresh again, and above all to remind us of how odd she was. By beginning at the beginning, by showing us the reality of the childhood we only know through clichés—“grocer’s daughter,†“scholarship girlâ€â€”by introducing us to the boyfriends we’ve never met and by quoting from her chatty, breathless letters to her sister (“I decided to buy a really nice undie-set to go under my turquoise chiffon blouseâ€) Moore shows us how impossible it would have been for anyone who knew her as a young woman to imagine what she would become. He also captures her unsettling personality, her “actressy†manner, her stiffness in public, her private warmth, her inept outbursts and faux pas, almost always using the language of people who were there at the time. During the decade and a half he worked on this authorized biography—of which this is only the first volume—Moore had unprecedented access to her private papers, on condition that nothing be published until after her death. He interviewed just about everyone who knew Thatcher, from her private secretaries to her political enemies, and he did so meticulously. This enabled Moore to produce not a hagiography or a court biography, as some feared he would, but a multi-faceted picture of a compelling and unusual life. Moore is at his best when presenting different views of the same situation. Some of these contradictory impressions are explained by the fact that she was female in an almost entirely male world. In later years, many assumed she had no interest in other women or awareness of herself as a role model, but Moore shows over and over again that this was not the case. Her oddity was also connected to her brilliance, another one of her qualities now lost beneath layers of history and controversy. Thatcher got to Oxford from Grantham not because she had connections but because she worked incredibly hard, even overcoming objections from a teacher who told her to forget Oxford because “you haven’t got Latin.†She said, “I’ll get Latin†and went to take lessons from a Latin teacher at a local boy’s school. Later, she passed the Bar exam after studying tax law on her own. The same autodidactic instinct impelled her to study economic and political theory. Although this is very much a narrative biography, it is also a thematic book about ideas: where they come from, how they affect people and how they get shaped into policies. And Thatcher proved unusually receptive to what were then very unfashionable ideas. In the summer of 1968, when the rest of the world was turning on and dropping out, she was in her suburban sitting room reading library books on Conservative political philosophy. In the end, this combination of biography and intellectual history works perfectly. After all, Thatcher’s ideas were shaped by the place where she was born, by the people she met, by Oxford in the 1940s and Finchley in the 1950s, by her quirkiness and her brilliance, by her provinciality and her romantic choices. To understand what happened to Britain during her prime ministership and afterwards, it really is important to understand who she was: Moore’s Thatcher will now become the definitive account.
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From Booklist
Gird your loins! Because unless you are fanatical about twentieth-century British politics, the last page of this hulking biography—this being only the first of two volumes—will remain out of reach. Authorized here means Moore was granted full access to Lady Thatcher (who, it will be remembered, is only recently deceased) and to her private papers; what it means to the reader is that the treatment is neither unvarnished nor uncritical. Everyone knows Margaret Thatcher was the longest serving—and first female—prime Âminister of Great Britain, and everyone knows of her legendary reputation for being the Iron Lady and the supposedly compassionless manner in which she ran the country during her tenure at 10 Downing Street. What we learn here, in exacting detail, are the makings of a single-minded politico who conceived early on her prescription for the ills of Britain and let other aspects of her life take second place to achieving the government positions in which she could see her ideas through. The thorough lesson in the fine points of British government that this massive treatment becomes will leave Thatcher admirers set in their beliefs, while Thatcher detractors will see what they want to see in the book. Middle-grounders, then, will get the most out of it, for their sense of both the good and the bad within the woman will be sustained. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Thatcher’s recent death has heightened interest in the late prime minister. --Brad Hooper
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Product details
Hardcover: 896 pages
Publisher: Knopf; First Edition edition (May 21, 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0307958949
ISBN-13: 978-0307958945
Product Dimensions:
6.6 x 1.8 x 9.6 inches
Shipping Weight: 3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
4.2 out of 5 stars
77 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#699,217 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
Although this is the authorized biography, and the author is an admirer of his subject, it is far from a simple hagiography. Moore presents the matter researched coherently, then he mainly lets it speak for itself. He also does not hold back from pointing out minor inconsistencies in previous accounts, including in Thatcher’s memoirs.Moore is intelligent and diligent, and never allows his narrative to become boring or repetitive. The extensive acknowledgments, endnotes and bibliography demonstrate the depth of the research. Turning such a mountain range of material into a well-organized, readable manuscript is a feat, which the author probably had to pursue while keeping in mind one of Thatcher’s favorite prayers from Sir Francis Drake, which encourages persistence.There are very many books available on this subject, but to me this is a much more worthwhile a read than either a straightforward cheerleading account or a hatchet job. It is critical in the best, evaluative, sense of the word. And although it points out the telling fact, it never comes close to lecturing the reader.The organization of chapters on a thematic basis works well, and provides a good mix, conveying Thatcher’s prodigious work ethic from her schooldays on, and culminating in the momentous battles at home and abroad in the first part of her premiership.
A good and (VERY) detailed biography that could have saved about 100-150 pages if the author, Charles Moore didn't talk about every detail of Lady Thatcher, down to her clothes and house life. This was an interesting portrait of her, clearly very pro-Thatcher, but that's what you get when it is an authorized biography. Mr. Moore feels free to criticize her and offer his critiques with the wonders of hindsight, but still sticks to a very pro Thatcher line. Other than that, the bio seems to pick up a bit when she does become Prime Minister in 1979 and shows how divisive and uncompromising she was. He introduces a lot of characters in this first edition, and some of them I feel didn't need a footnote biography for them. Other issues that I feel were present in this book was his lack of clarity of British Politics to the Non-British readers, and the fact that he spelled out her daily life as if he was reading her diary and putting it in this book. Hopefully, Volume 2 is better.
Is the reviewer reviewing the book or the person. Whatever your personal view of Margaret Roberts (and she didn't create ambivalence) or her premiership, this book and part 2 to follow is outstanding scholarship, hence five stars. Years in the making by the editor of the Daily Telegraph, Charles Moore, the surprising - he was never really a Thatcher fanboy - but inspired choice to be Thatcher's official biographer. What is achieved here challenges the Gold Standard (excuse the 1925 inspired pun) of political biographies, William Manchester's two volumes on Churchill.As official biographer Moore spoke to the Thatcher family, including her reclusive elder sister Muriel. Muriel passed on never before seen letters written to her from Margaret when she was a young woman at Oxford and beyond. These letters provide a fascinating insight into the mind of the young Margaret and are the highlight of the early chapters here. In these Ms Roberts seems to be selling herlife to her sister and seeking her approval as younger sisters do. She also comes across as both ambitious and incredibly frugal with money, as befitted her lack of monetary independence. Whilst her sisterly confessions of fashion strategy (how she splashed out on that skirt but it's worth it because she can wear it many times) might seem trivial, they provide insight into Margaret's strategic way of thinking. What it seems she learned from her fastidious, hard-working father was always to make considered, strategic choices.Moore also consulted thousands of documents from places such as the UN, IMF, English-Speaking Union, Library of Congress, Churchill College (containing the Thatcher papers), Conservative Party Archives and many many others. He visited many of the key places in Thatcher's history. The list of the hundreds of important political figures interviewed reads like a who's who of British and American politics of the last thirty years.Returning to that colossus of biography William Manchester I wrote this in my review of Manchester's MacArthur a few years ago: "the genius of Manchester is that one could read this and come away loving or completely loathing MacArthur". The same is true here of Moore and Thatcher. He gets out of the way and doesn't seek to offer his own modern psychobabble-speculation on Margaret's motives, feelings, relations with her mother and all that. He just tries to let the facts, the interviews, the letters, the primary people's own recollections tell the story. This makes for great reading as during this book my own opinion of Thatcher tossed around like a frigate in story waters. Admiration - sure. She got things done. She made some great, tough decisions and toughed things out. She acquired a team of loyal servants around her. But I have frustration and annoyance too. She was perhaps a narrow-minded Little Englander thrust into a job that none of the men around her had the balls to do, leading the Conservative Party in 1975 at the peak of trade union power in the UK. One of the harshest but most prescient criticisms is that she was a bourgeios, in its original condescending meaning of narrow, petty, climbing and unglorious. That she wasn't somehow broad enough for the job. But her tenacious old-fashioned patriotism made her appealing to many, especially after the "leadership" of Britain shown by Wilson, Heath and Callaghan before her. Loyal men worked for her and saw her as a glorious Joan of Arc swinging her sword at the demons of Labour, the left, the unions, the EU, the argies. Her ability to attract and maintain beta males to her cause, despite her appalling treatment of them, is one of the most striking aspects of the book. Since the alpha male of the Conservative party in the late 60s and early 70s, Enoch Powell, was sidelined because of his infamous Rivers of Blood speech, Thatcher became the alpha. "Gentlemen, let us join the ladies" she famously said after one war cabinet meeting. She challenged and humiliated those who opposed her, such as the 'wets' in her own cabinet. She was a classic bully and this led to her own downfall, to Geoffrey Howe's wife writing the speech for him which ended her Premiership. But we are getting ahead here. This book covers everything from childhood, university, marriage, early political career up to the end of the Falklands, the battle for real estate in the South Atlantic thousands of miles from London which perhaps saved her Premiership in the early 1980s from its hugely unpopular economic policies. The Falklands conflict and its bizarre insignificant significance, its glorious pettiness revealed to the British public that they had a leader for the first time since Churchill, someone who was willing to do dangerous stupid things with their lives for the sake of national glory or pride. As Manchester details, Churchill insisted in WW1 on the Dardanelles navy attack on Turkey (a failed navy operation that turned into an even more disastrous military one) instead of a small landing in Syria that could have required no more that 20,000 men. I have no doubt that if Thatcher had been looking at the casualty list for Gallipoli she would send in another regiment or five.
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