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The Political Animal: An Anatomy
 
 
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The Political Animal: An Anatomy [Hardcover]

Jeremy Paxman
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 340 pages
  • Publisher: Michael Joseph; 1st edition (21 Oct 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0718144228
  • ISBN-13: 978-0718144227
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 16 x 3.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 330,973 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Jeremy Paxman
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Product Description

Review

What does it take to become a truly 'political animal' - and why would anyone strive to become one, given the low opinion which we have, sooner or later, of almost all politicians? Paxman is not known for lacking cynicism concerning the ways and motives of the contemporary breed - but in this overview he presents what is billed as a 'witty, unsparing, but essentially sympathetic portrait of modern politicians and the strange world they inhabit'. The text is under wraps because of serialisation - but this promises to be a highly readable and lively take on those currently and recently purveying our brand of democracy, or the 'least bad form of government'.

Product Description

What is it about the business of politics which turns hope, vision and ambition to despair? Jeremy Paxman proposes to find out. Among the things this book examines are: where politicians come from; how they are chosen; the promises and compromises they must make to get on; how the party machines control them or fail to do so; how to win elections; how to fake sincerity; the terror of power; riding the civil service; what the cabinet is really like; and why democracy - the least bad form of government we can imagine is destined always to disappoint.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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First Sentence
Where did they all come from, this extraordinary breed? Once upon a time, they must have been normal. Read the first page
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Well written and engaging but ultimately not as insightful as you might hope. For anyone interested in politics and the political process Paxman's latest is an entertaining source of anecdotes and a useful introduction to the way democratic politics has developed in Britain. Despite this the book always feels a bit limited and falls down on two fronts. Firstly, the existence of other, better books on this subject (e.g. Gerald Kaufman's "How to be a Minister", Andrew Rawnsley's "Servants of the People"). Secondly (and possibly this is just me) the expectation that a commentator of Paxman's stature might have just a few more new ideas to throw into the melting pot. Ultimately an enjoyable read, just don't expect a great deal more.
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful
Naked ambition 28 Sep 2003
Format:Paperback
Why do we have such high expectations of politicians as a class yet such low expectations of the individuals? We enjoy the small change of political scandal – the revelations of unorthodox private lives or unsavoury business practice, while at the same time tuttutting that politicians are just as stupid, venal and corrupt as any of us. Paxman’s book makes an important contribution to a debate that’s just gaining currency – how can we re-engage people with politics when the so-called Westminster Village – parliament and the media circus that surrounds it – seems so self obsessed and distant from everyday life. His thesis is that this is essential, if civil society is to be maintained, and argues that our double standards do ourselves a disservice – politicians in the UK at least are less corrupt and sleazy than we might think, and certainly less so than in many other European democracies. But his main point is that politicians won’t exactly make this easy – for they’re a decidedly odd lot, an extension I suppose of the old adage that anyone who wants the job probably is unsuited to it by that very desire. In an episodic look at the politician’s life – the early years as a hack, candidacy, and the new MP through to the close of political life whether by election defeat, resignation or retirement – he aims to uncover just what it is that makes them tick. Paxman’s approach will be familiar to Newsnight viewers and here, he’s on home turf – feline, deceptively humorous yet with a menacing undercurrent. If you like his style you’ll find parts of The Political Animal laugh out loud funny, the odd irritating factual error notwithstanding - and not only for his Jeffrey Archer gags.
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Brilliant Journalism 19 Dec 2002
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
This is a rare tome - a book about politics that will entertain and instruct both political junkies and the common reader.

That means, of course, that it's not a work of academic political science. Rather it's a work of inspired journalism by a master feature-writer.

Feature writers commonly weave together three things - facts, quotes and anecdotes - and they hang them on a theme. Usually they provide plenty of facts and quotes but good anecdotes are normally in short supply (or badly written) even though they are the ingredients that build readability.

Jeremy Paxman not only provides plenty of facts and striking quotes in his analysis of British politicians and their wayward habits but also gives us a text fairly bristling with pertinent anecdotes drawn from the politics of the past century or so.

It's important to make this point because the questions he sets out to answer may seem dull to the common reader: "Where do politicians come from? Why do they do it? Why do we seem so disenchanted with them? And why does the experience of politics nearly always end in disillusion?"

With admirable impartiality and in a sparkling prose style, Paxman hangs his diverting collection of facts, quotes and anecdotes on the theme that politicians are generally untrustworthy, power-hungry, hypocritical, naive or disillusioned. Certainly almost all of them end with their ideals or illusions badly battered by the experience of an adversary system which is corrupted by competition, connivance, secrecy and rivalry. Privately few of them ever have a good word to say about a colleague or competitor.

Almost all of them end disillusioned and the most disillusioned of all are those who climb highest. If these high-flyers don't end in defeat or disgrace, they fade (thank goodness!) into obscurity.

Sounds dull, but it ain't. This book is a buzz from beginning to end. Even if you've never read another book on politics - and even if you aren't British - you can read this one with immense enjoyment and learn much as you laugh and curse your way through its sparkling text. This is a rare case in which the word "brilliant" is completely apposite.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Politics & Politicians.
A very informative and witty book - politicians are dispatched in print with the withering sarcasm that we see from Jeremy Paxman on television. Read more
Published 1 month ago by David J.
Fave book
Bought this for my son who loves politics in any shape or form. Must say this is his favourite book of all time and he has read many.
Published 6 months ago by Mrs S
Paxman at Home
Having read most of his books, I looked forward to his volume - no Victorian paintings, royalty, quintessentially English people, fly-fishing - just Paxman at home with... Read more
Published 8 months ago by RR Waller
Punchy, amusing, insightful anatomy of the politician
'The Political Animal' is Jeremy Paxman's attempt to anatomise the politician: that peculiar creature who devotes him- or herself to the pursuit of personal power by way of... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Paul Bowes
A real eye opener
We all know that Jeremy Paxman is disdainful of politicians, or at the very least, sceptical. In his book, The Political Animal, he tells us why. Read more
Published 18 months ago by A. J. Wentworth
Entertaining and informative
This is an entertaining look at not just the political individual but also the greater British political machine. Read more
Published 19 months ago by HGT
Most Intelligently Observed
I once wanted to be a politician (we're talking 25 years ago now). A good friend, who knew both politics and me, said I had no chance: "you're not the type", he told me,... Read more
Published on 10 April 2010 by Andy
Predictable, but then you would have guessed that
I cannot imagine that anyone will go into this book believing many politicians, if indeed any, are normal in the public's sense of the word and there is nothing here to confound... Read more
Published on 11 July 2009 by Stephen B. Peddie
I was so bored...
I like to think I've got a good understanding of politics and when I ordered this I wasn't expecting an exciting book but this really is one of the most boring books I've ever... Read more
Published on 19 May 2009 by The Reviewer
Why do we let them run the country?
The Political Animal by Jeremy Paxman is a very good book examing politics and politicians. It is well written and very interesting but if you don't like Paxman as an interviewer... Read more
Published on 29 Oct 2008 by HBH
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