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A Journey Hardcover – 2 Sep 2010

3.5 out of 5 stars 246 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 718 pages
  • Publisher: Hutchinson; 1st edition (2 Sept. 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 009192555X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0091925550
  • Product Dimensions: 16.2 x 4.6 x 24 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (246 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 112,099 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

Written in a congenial style peppered with slang and gossipy asides. At one moment he is the bloke in the pub. The next, he is Churchill. --Ben MacIntyre, The Times

This is a more honest political memoir than most and more open in many respects than I had anticipated. He is compellingly candid about how scared he was when he first became prime minister . . . He is unusually direct about his calculations, even when they don't reflect well on him . . . He admits to stretching the truth beyond 'breaking point' to secure a settlement in Northern Ireland. Even when the lies are told in a noble cause, few politicians are honest enough to admit that they sometimes feel compelled to be deceivers. --Andrew Rawnsley, Observer

I have read many a prime ministerial memoir and none of the other authors has been as self-deprecating, as willing to admit mistakes and to tell jokes against themselves --Mary Ann Sieghart, Independent

Book Description

The memoirs of Tony Blair - a worldwide publishing sensation --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

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Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
I have never liked Tony Blair, never liked Labour and marched against the War. I bought this book from a desire understand why Labour and particularly Tony Blair governed as they did. I could not put the book down and found it genuinely fascinating both as an insight into politics and also the role of the prime minister in modern Britain. Blair is very different from the man I was expecting and a far better man than I would have guessed. Although still against the war, he had by the end convinced me there was an argument both ways. Whilst I consider myself objective, I admit I felt a bit of shame that I definitely fell into the camp that has allowed itself to be led by media opinion of individuals rather than seriously considering a politicians argument on its merits. His reflection on the negative way the media influences politics and public opinion is spot on and this really must change. A lot of reviewers have criticised the personal style the book is written in and in normal circumstances I might agree. However A journey is such a good read that this becomes irrelevant and actually really helps to get inside the mind of a man who is making decisions with historic and grave consequences every day. The analysis of the relationships within the Labour Party is also particularly intriguing. Most of the negative reviews on this site do seem to come at the book with an agenda and also I suspect have not read the entire book or even some of it. Certainly for me it has changed my whole perspective of the New Labour years and its principle architects and is more informative than one hundred second-rate history books on the subject. To sum up, if you have any serious interest in Great Britain and Northern Ireland and its future, this is a book that should definitely be read.
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By Musicfan TOP 500 REVIEWERVINE VOICE on 23 Mar. 2016
Format: Paperback
I enjoy political biogrpaphies and autobiogrpahies whether or not I like or agree with he politics of the subject. Tony Blair clearly mdoernised the Labour Party (although it appears to have now regressed!).but did he change it to a sound bite media friendly machine that was more gloss than substance? Did he really as PM improve anything for anyone? People will have of course have different views. I found this book a rather boring read. It takes so long to get to the point you sometimes forget what the point was in the first place. I found interesting his relationship with Gordon Brown (no love lst there?). It was interesting to read his take on some of the crises that arose during his time. However, I could not help but feel he was out of touch with the people of some of them, which pretty much fits my view of the last Labour Governments. it is a book that for lacks sincerity. These were exciting and difficult times and the book is rather stodgy and boring. Blar did well for himself but did he do well for the country? I found myself skipping page after page to get to the point. I found it a rather disappointing and a rather boring book. It could have done with a good few hundred pages less and getting to the point quicker. I was looking forward to reading this but lam disappointed
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Format: Paperback
As a Brit who lived in the US throughout Blair's period as PM I've always wondered how someone who won three elections (two of them landslides) ended up so vilified in the UK. His autobiography gives the reader a number of clues:

(1) Blair comes across as very smart, but also very pragmatic. He had a really good sense of how British society had changed and early on he was willing to set the government to work on what the electorate actually wanted the government to do - and he was able to get changes made - many of which were very significant in how major institutions in the UK operate.
(2) In the last few years of his period in office he appears to have given up trying to explain or even convince his colleagues or the electorate what he was up to - he just knew he was right and got on and did it. Not exactly how a democracy is supposed to work...
(3) He really thinks he is much smarter than the people around him. He clearly felt Gordon Brown was not up to the task of being PM - and blocked him for as long as he could. Subsequent experience bore his judgment out though - which is pretty telling.
(4) Politicians nowadays have a strict "sell by" date. The media gets bored with the same face for too long. Party colleagues get angry at the lack of opportunity for them because the leader refuses to move on.
(5) Iraq was a tight call - which went the wrong way for him - and exacerbated point (4) above. The book has multiple long rambling defenses of his actions on Iraq (some of the less interesting passages of the book) but in the end he made a call (the UK must stay close to the US) on a very weak hand (there was no WMD) - and paid a huge political price.
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By L. Davidson VINE VOICE on 8 Nov. 2015
Format: Paperback
I was never a huge fan of Tony Blair and New Labour. I never could warm to him as a person and was suspicious of his relentless desire to change things. However having read his fascinating autobiography I now have a respect for a man who has a towering intellect and an astute political vision. He comes across as a serious, ambitious moderniser driven by a deep belief in his own rectitude and virtue. However he also comes across as being too single minded and intolerant of those who disagree with him. The book is well written and covers the period between his becoming Labour leader and him stepping down as PM in 2007. The reader gets fascinating insights into the lifestyle and thought processes of a British Prime Minister,the pressures and the problems. We find out about his fractious relationship with Gordon Brown, the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, the election victories and his driving ambition to implement New Labour social and economic reform policies which were different from Old Labour ones in that they accepted the virtues of the market, competition and personal wealth accumulation in contrast to socialist values which were suspicious of them. New Labour was a centrist, Tory lite concept which was however extremely successful. Blair won three general elections and attracted voters who would tend to normally support the Tories. Since Blair left the scene Labour has returned to its old socialist ways and predictably has lost two elections in a row. This book is an intriguing analysis of the New Labour years and Blair comes across as an impressive figure. However he will probably be remembered for his less than successful military interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan which have come to define his legacy and made him a hate figure for those on the Left who have set about destroying New Labour.Read more ›
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