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Comrade Corbyn: A Very Unlikely Coup: How Jeremy Corbyn Stormed to the Labour Leadership Hardcover – 1 Feb 2016

3.8 out of 5 stars 28 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Biteback Publishing (1 Feb. 2016)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1849549966
  • ISBN-13: 978-1849549967
  • Product Dimensions: 24.5 x 3.9 x 16.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 48,248 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

"Fascinating and forensic - a real insight into the making of Labour's accidental leader. Meticulously researched and always even-handed, this is a very human portrait of a figure who has become a byword for controversy. Essential reading for anyone who follows politics." --Mary Riddell, Daily Telegraph

"Comrade Corbyn is a real political thriller with a revolutionary ending. This is British politics' most incredible political journey. Ever." --Kevin Maguire, Daily Mirror

"An accomplished study and the most lucid explanation yet of the Labour Party's present state." --New Statesman

About the Author

Rosa Prince was born and raised in London. She is an award-winning political journalist and was part of the team that broke the 2009 expenses scandal. A member of the Parliamentary Lobby for more than ten years, for the Daily Mirror and Daily Telegraph, Rosa was also US correspondent for the Telegraph. She is now a freelance journalist and writer, and is the author of Standing Down: Interviews with Retiring MPs, published by Biteback in 2015.


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Customer Reviews

3.8 out of 5 stars
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Format: Hardcover
Readers who want to know more about Corbyn’s political career and beliefs are unlikely to get much satisfaction from Rosa Prince’s Comrade Corbyn. As an account of Corbyn’s leadership campaign, however, the book has a lot to offer.
In fairness to Rosa Prince, her book does not profess to be a biography of Jeremy Corbyn. While recognising that the main focus of the book is the Labour Leadership contest, I thought that the chapters dealing with Corbyn’s political career before 2015 were pretty superficial and failed to give a meaningful political dimension to his beliefs and values. For example, I wanted to know more about Corbyn’s experiences as trade union organiser representing low paid, mainly female public sector workers, and the degree to which these experiences shaped his political views. Apart from references to his close association with Tony Benn, little space was devoted in the book to Corbyn’s years of internal exile in the Labour Party, when he was cold-shouldered by successive Party leaders and much of the parliamentary party.
Price’s book takes off when it reaches the 2015 Labour leadership contest. She explains how constitutional change, which made it more difficult for the Labour Party establishment to stitch-up the outcome of a future leadership ballot; combined with a left-ward shift amongst the Party membership, created the right climate for Corbyn’s bid for the leadership. Rose Prince repeatedly emphasises that Corbyn’s anti-austerity message set him apart from the three other contenders, whose views and records had little appeal to a wide section of the Party membership. The skilful use of social media, inept campaigning by Corbyn’s rivals and Corbyn’s ability to mobilise his supporters to register to vote in the ballot, combined to give Corbyn a stunning victory.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
For anyone interested in the Jeremy Corbyn phenomenon this book will prove to be an interesting read. The author has been criticised for emphasising Corbyn’s middle-class roots and comfortable upbringing and Zoe Williams at the Guardian has called it a ‘spiteful analysis’.

Certainly, the author wouldn’t claim to have a natural affinity with the left but it is a credible record of the path that led the Labour leader to achieve his remarkable victory. In a recent interview, the author said that she warmed towards her subject as the book developed and she does seem to acknowledge him as a man of principle.

Jeremy Corbyn would not approve of the references to his personal life which he would regard as both intrusive and irrelevant but the chapters chronicling his leadership campaign and in particular the actions of his fellow candidates are quite revealing. They clearly misread the public mood and at times exercised extremely bad judgement.

It becomes clear that the other leadership candidates all failed to grasp the reasons why Jeremy Corbyn had gained so much popular support both from the public and the fast growing new membership, until almost the day of the leadership election. It is perhaps unfortunate that so many of the quotations are from anonymous sources, attributed to ‘an advisor’; ‘a campaign source’; ‘a senior MP’ or a ‘former party aide’. But perhaps that is inevitable with a political biography that didn’t have direct access to Jeremy Corbyn or his close friends, family and colleagues.

For that reason the story doesn’t have the same depth as it would have done had it been authorised.
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Format: Hardcover
I think some of those who, like me, admire Jeremy Corbyn, are being too harsh. This book is not a hatchet job. What it does is marshal the known facts about this most self-effacing of men and give a detailed account of the election which swept him to the Labour leadership - the best I have read so far. Extracts in the Tory newspapers give the wrong impression. The author may not - probably doesn't - share his views, but she is quite clear that JC is an excellent constituency MP and a totally decent person. Considering that she had only a few months to research and write it, she has done well.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
One of the Amazon reviews posted referred to the author as being a 'Telegraph hack' with a bias is such a lazy response. From the jacket it's clear that the author worked as a journalist for The Mirror as well as The Telegraph: a pretty broad political spectrum. After reading this book I'd be hard pressed to take a view on the author's personal political position. I bought Comrade Corbyn because I was fascinated by Jeremy Corbyn's ascendancy to the Labour leadership. I certainly didn't want a hagiography but an insight into the man and his unexpected election. And this book certainly delivers that and in such a gripping way. It is a great story and the author tells with verve and style, as well as giving the reader an solid informative grounding. I very highly recommend this book if you want to make up your own mind about one of the most remarkable political stories of the decade.
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Format: Hardcover
Given the huge number of past activities to cover in Jeremy Corbyn’s life, and how little had been written about him previously, Rosa Prince’s Comrade Corbyn is impressively comprehensive in the range of information pulled together so quickly.

From Corbyn's relatively prosperous upbringing, through his early politics being heavily influenced by seeing huge inequality overseas, and on into this career as a Labour politician, Prince traces the story with fulsome detail.

I am not sure she ever really gets under the skin of her subject to explain what makes him tick, but that is hard to do with such instant biographies - and all the more so with as reclusive a person as Jeremy Corbyn.

Where, for examples, does his strong anti-Americanism come from? Or why does he praise overseas left wing governments who, for example, give their secret police sweeping powers yet in the UK is often fiercely opposed to even much more modest police powers? How does he square his support for human rights causes and Amnesty International with his attitudes towards the IRA? Both fans and critics of Corbyn can think of answers to suit their views, but if you want to know what really are the answers inside Corbyn's head, then Comrade Corbyn does not contain much material to enlighten you.

That is partly because the book sometimes suffers a little from a fairly simple ‘he said / she said’ structure. Many friends and critics of Corbyn are quoted. But often the coverage is just that - both sides of a dispute are briefly quoted and the reader is left with nothing other than their pre-existing prejudices to choose which side to believe.
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