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Betty Boothroyd Autobiography
 
 
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Betty Boothroyd Autobiography [Paperback]

Betty Boothroyd
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Product details

  • Paperback: 512 pages
  • Publisher: Arrow; New edition edition (3 Oct 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0099427044
  • ISBN-13: 978-0099427049
  • Product Dimensions: 11.1 x 3.2 x 17.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 135,044 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Betty Boothroyd
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Betty Boothroyd: The Autobiography has Baroness Boothroyd of Sandwell, with her characteristic endearing zeal, recounting her trail from working-class Dewsbury to Westminster. The daughter of a weftman, she passes from rags to political riches with the Labour Party, to which she claims an umbilical loyalty. After a now-notorious spell with the Tiller Girls, she started working full-time for the Labour Party, and eventually, after four attempts at securing a seat, she finally won West Bromwich in 1973--the constituency she was to represent for 27 years. Pro-Europe, pro-choice, anti-capital punishment, she was made a junior Whip in 1974 and Deputy Speaker in 1987 before finally succeeding Jack Weatherill to become the 155th--and first female--Speaker of the House of Commons in 1992. By the time of her retirement from the Chair in July 2000, her "wigless informality" had seen her become one of the most recognisable and popular faces, not just in the House or West Bromwich, but throughout the country.

The woman Private Eye cruelly and unfairly accused of having "all the charm of carbon monoxide gas in an airtight room" airs her story with unstuffy grace and emphatic integrity. Much has been made of the large sum the publishers paid for her story, but Boothroyd chooses discretion over revelation in describing her path from model to Madame Speaker: while she discusses her brief experience training with the Tiller Girls, she includes no photographs from the period, and declines to elaborate further on the three proposals of marriage she claims to have received. Nevertheless, she assesses her political career and tenure on the Chair with splendid candour, from the fight to rid the Party of Militant, ding-dongs with party Whips, the "cash for questions" controversy, Nelson Mandela's first state visit to London, Gerry Adams' and Martin McGuinness' refusal to take the Parliamentary oath, to the fuss over her banning women MPs from breastfeeding during committee. Never constrained by doctrine but always fiercely loyal to her principles, her motto as Speaker, "I Speak to Serve", fittingly sums up the distinguished, quietly extraordinary political career of this much-loved Yorkshire terrier. --David Vincent --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

William Hague Sunday Telegraph

‘Betty Boothroyd is frank, fun and generous…an uncomplicated book by a straightforward lady.’

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
A heart-warming read 20 Oct 2002
Format:Paperback
Betty Boothroyd describes her life, starting as a child in a working-class home in Yorkshire, progressing to a brief but much-publicised spell with the Tiller Girls dancing troupe; becoming after a long struggle a Labour MP, and finally her election as the first woman Speaker of the House of Commons. I enjoyed this book, and would rate it next to Ted Heath's autobiography in that genre. I'm really put off by political autobiographies which the authors use to justify their past record, or settle old scores. Betty does neither. Instead, she gives a lively account of life climbing the political pole, and a refreshing insight into Westminster, from the unusual vantage-point of the Speaker's chair. Her vision of the role of Parliament in controlling the governing party of the day, and holding it accountable, is inspiring. She is an instinctive, energetic politician, not a theoretician, but her warmth and heartfelt insights are nonetheless inspiring. She does keep the reader somewhat at arm's length from her personal life, which is probably prudent in today's senationalist society.This is a fairly easy read, but an enjoyable one.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By hbw TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
As a young woman, Betty Boothroyd flirted briefly with a stage career before returning to her first love: politics. Forty years later she achieved a curious kind of stardom when she became the first woman Speaker of the House of Commons.

The only child of working class parents, Betty paints a vivid picture of her childhood in the Yorkshire mill town of Dewsbury. Limited educational opportunities meant that she had to set about earning her keep from the day she left school. From this unpromising background, Betty forged a career based on hard work, quick-wittedness and a gift for making friends with people from every walk of life.

Much of the book is taken up by a fascinating and acutely observed insider's view of Parliament (Betty was an MP's secretary long before she became an MP) and the British Labour Party from the 1950s to the beginning of the 21st century. Whilst her heart was in domestic politics, the internationally-minded Boothroyd travelled widely, including a spell working for the Kennedy campaign in the early 1960s.

Crucially, however, it's about parliamentary democracy: how it works and why it matters.

Passionate, plain-speaking and good-humoured, Betty Boothroyd writes as she has lived: at a breathless pace with occasional breaks for a cup of tea or a gin and tonic. This is a highly readable and thoroughly honest account of a life in politics (and how much fun it all was).
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33 of 38 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Many of us have read John Major, Maggie Thatcher, Wilson, and other political biographies simply because we're political animals. Betty Boothroyd's contribution is unusual - she combines the trials and tribulations of being a parliamentarian with the funny and humourous side of the role.

As the first woman Speaker in the Commons, she overcame significant obstacles in gaining the fierce reputation she held as she retired. In this excellent, moving and often funny book, she recounts some of the difficult times she had, faultlessly combining these stories with the often hilarious antics of her Westminster colleagues.

The ending to the book leaves the reader with a clear idea of how she intends to use her time in the House of Lords, as Baronness Boothroyd. She may not be as prominent a figure as she has been in the lower house, but I have no doubt that she will be just as principled.

This is an excellent book, and it will appeal to all - even those for whom the genre of 'politics' normally leaves cold. Superb - order it now!

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