The greatest political autobiography...ever
|
Like another reviewer I had this on my Christmas list- and not being a conservative voter didn't really know what to expect.
Having seen Matthew on Grumpy Old Men, Question Time, and having his flat in London featured on Through The Keyhole(one entire wall being covered with books from ceiling to floor-always a sucker for a house with a heaving bookshelf)started reading with much interest.
All I can say is read this book and if you ever met him buy him a pint...for this tomb deserves it.In my own little way I think I understand him just that blittle bit better now for reading this and I feel all the better for doing so.
|
|
great read
|
well written book by the columnist and ex politician. Totally honest. One incident in particular from his time in Africa makes painful reading but fair play to him for writing about it. His adventures in gay London are very interesting and written dispassionately. Insights into Portillo Thatcher and the whole cast of that fin de siecle tory regime, the last days of Major, far more valuable than their own so called memoirs. Buy it.
|
|
An interesting life and interesting views
|
|
He writes very well, sometimes poetically. His views are original and his range of enthusiasms and the challenges he embraces are stirring. There is a lot of honesty in this biography, but I think he deludes himself when he says on page 452 that he regrets hurting anybody: he thinks his sketches of people are merely witty, but they are often cruel and must hurt, especially people whom he knew as friends. And I was surprised to discover, for all his self-denigration, so much vanity in him.
|
|
Enjoyable biography (spoilers)
|
|
Matthew Parris is a notable journalist in the field of politics and, having been an MP himself at one time, loves to write in detail about the Parliamentary world. Much like his newspaper articles, this biography is written with an elegant, fluid and highly readable prose style that really captures it's author's personality. The early section about Matthew's happy but highly unusual childhood travelling across Rhodesia, Swaziland and Jamaica, is well written but it would be better suited as backup to his travel books, and is not nearly as good as what follows. When Matthew lands in England to go to Cambridge University, then his book really takes off. Matthew's highly cynical, but humourously realistic take on the British institutions he encounters (Cambridge, the Foreign Office and eventually the House of Commons) is very enlightening and he writes in such a way you can't help but agree with him. Matthew is also well-placed to comment on several popular politicians of recent years including Michael Portillo and John Patten. He may have remained merely a backbench MP but he got to know Margaret Thatcher very well when she was in office, and he manages to capture in his own way her many strengths and flaws, building a very complete picture of this most domineering of politicians. His opinion of John Major is equally good, as he describes the various subtleties that lay behind his "boring" image and shows the man to be a much stronger character than he was often perceived in his time. His opinion of Tony Blair is also very well written. Matthew spotted far earlier than most of us the flaws of our current Prime Minister, a charismatic figure with an excellent grasp of oral rhetoric who was (and still is in many ways) American-influenced in his speeches and politics, with a shallow grasp of policies and detail. At the same time, Matthew shows himself to be slightly eccentric, bumbling to a degree and insecure almost to the point of madness. His homosexuality is revealed to be a large factor in this, and the sections on Clapham Common as well his Newsnight encounter capture this very well. A highly perceptive and readable biography. Well worth a look.
|
|
Chance upon this book and you'll be rewarded!
|
|
Matthew Parris cannot be accused of self-service in this enjoyable "memoir", a series of recollections of important events and important people's lives in which he was a bit player. He has been through many peripheral roles - working in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, as a correspondent clerk for Mrs Thatcher when she was Leader of the Opposition, a backbench MP and a parliamentary speechwriter. He delivers opinions, views and observances with wit and panache. He is a good story teller, and his brushes with those in authority are genuinely amusing. It is also a very touching book - we learn how hard he found it cruising on Clapham Common, a very moving moment. Some may not approve of the way that he has laid his life bare, but he feels genuinely proud of the small advances he feels he contributed to for equality for homosexuals. He has also reprinted many amusing sketches. Having read a collection of his sketches (Off-Message), I felt the extracts worked better in this book because he provided the context, and we also receive a commentary from him as well. My one criticism of the book would concern his ruminations on his failure to enter into any form of office, not understanding why he was never able to climb to greasy pole, though he does provide an explanation for his failure. I also grew tired towards the end about how he kept banging on about how insignificant he was in the events he witnessed, and indeed he felt it had applied to his whole life. Had this been the case people would not have wanted to read the book: the fact that people have show that people respect him and enjoy his writing. He came across as a man seeking approval slightly too much. That aside, it is a very interesting and enjoyable read. He has a real wit, and I found the book to be good fun, accurately observed and moving in all the right places.
|
|
|