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Margaret Thatcher: The Authorized Biography, Volume Two: Everything She Wants (Authorised Biog Vol 2) Hardcover – 6 Oct 2015

4.7 out of 5 stars 74 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 880 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane (6 Oct. 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0713992883
  • ISBN-13: 978-0713992885
  • Product Dimensions: 16.1 x 5.5 x 24.1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (74 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 28,102 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

The second volume is if anything even better than the first, a model of close research, fluent prose and impeccable judgement. Yet the real measure of his achievement is that amid all the summits and meetings, the policy papers and parliamentary duels, he never loses sight of the woman at the centre of it all. Almost every page of Moore's book throws up an unexpected insight or nugget. Moore writes as an unashamed Thatcher fan, but it is to his immense credit that the book never feels unduly partisan. He is frank about her failings. What keeps you turning the pages is not just Moore's lovely, smooth style, but his quiet dry humour. It is a tribute to Moore's skill as a writer that he makes you look at her as a human being. This is, I think, one of the great biographical achievements of our times. (Dominic Sandbrook Sunday Times)

Charles Moore has overcome the challenge of following his outstanding and compelling first volume on Mrs Thatcher's rise by making his second, the account of her period of greatest success, as exciting as a novel. ... As in the first volume, Moore shows a Thatcher far different from the myths of both Left and Right which are now part of British culture. ... This is a magnificent piece of work, and when he has completed it with the third volume, Moore will have done the justice she deserves to a great Prime Minister. (William Waldegrave Evening Standard)

Moore is supremely skilled at focusing on this issue or that and then swiftly pulling his camera back to show the sheer hectic muddle and rush of her life as Prime Minister. ... The extent of his research is unmatched by any other biographer. It includes interviews with many hundreds of people, both allies and enemies ... Unlike stuffier writers, he recognises the value in speaking to those whose lowlier positions let them spy on events from an oblique angle. Her detective recalls the way President Mitterrand kept staring at her legs on a car journey and an interpreter remembers her first set-to with not-yet-President Gorbachev. (Craig Brown Mail on Sunday)

Moore's project is a study of detailed depth, and fine and transparent judgements, which rises to the largeness of a figure and a time that were of world significance. It is written with evident admiration but never slops over into sycophancy. Very few journalists, with a lifetime of against-deadline scribbling behind them, could muster the sustained intellectual power this required. (John Lloyd Financial Times)

An awesomely thorough and authoritative portrait ... the definitive explanation of the strange person who most shaped modern Britain. (Andy Beckett Guardian)

About the Author

Charles Moore joined the staff of the Daily Telegraph in 1979, and as a political columnist in the 1980s covered several years of Mrs Thatcher's first and second governments. He was Editor of the Spectator 1984-90; Editor of the Sunday Telegraph 1992-95; and Editor of the Daily Telegraph 1995-2003, for which he is still a regular columnist. The first volume of his biography of Margaret Thatcher, published in 2013, won the Elizabeth Longford Prize for Historical Biography, the HW Fisher Best First Biography Prize and Political Book of the Year at the Paddy Power Political Book Awards.


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What an extraordinary achievement this is.

Of course, Moore has the enormous advantage of having been permitted to read masses of contemporary documents which the rest of us are not allowed to read. That was because Mrs Thatcher instructed the civil service to let him see it all. But that is not the only reason why we should be grateful to her for her treatment of these volumes. She also told her biographer, right from the start, that she would not read the book, which she insisted should not be published until after her death. Though I doubt whether Moore would have changed much if he had known that Mrs Thatcher was going to read his work, there would clearly have been a danger that he would have been tempted to tone down some passages in order to please her. As it is, he knew that not a word he wrote would be read by her. And he knew she would be dead before the first volume was published.

There is a general rule that almost every biography of a famous politician written during his or her life, or shortly after death, is pretty hopeless. If the subject of the biography is still alive, the author is bound to be affected by the knowledge that that subject will read the book. Even if the subject is recently dead, the author tends not to have access to important documents which will be available to future historians, and everything is usually done in an enormous rush. Mrs Thatcher was never going to read any of these volumes. Moore saw almost all the documents which will be available to future historians. He has, so far, taken eighteen years in researching and writing the book.
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I was 16 when Mrs Thatcher became Prime Minister. She dominated British politics for the next 12 years and indeed it could be argued that she dominates the British political landscape still, nearly 25 years after resigning as PM. This is the second volume of the authorised biography by Charles Moore and is the product of a vast amount of research, interviews and generally digging around. Moore as most people will know is a devotee of "The Leaderene" but doesn't hide her faults and within the context of his right wing perspective is I think reasonably objective and where needed even highly critical. Most notably and perceptively on her increasing estrangement over this period, the zenith of her power, from all her key lieutenants. For example, the final chapter covers the third Thatcher election campaign and victory of 1987. Mrs Thatcher is increasingly distrustful of the man who is her ideological soul mate and Tory Party Chairman, Norman Tebbit. Despite his avowed intent to stand down from politics due to the injuries he and his wife sustained in the Brighton bombing, she regards him as untrustworthy and scheming against her. The result is a farcical series of chaotic meetings resulting in "Wobbly Thursday" where Mrs Thatcher becomes convinced she is going to lose the election. (She won in a landslide). The same pattern of distrust and disdain towards her cabinet results in increasingly poisonous relations with Geoffrey Howe and Nigel Lawson. The former, who it has to be said was treated with disdain and rudeness, was to be her ultimate nemesis while the latter, like Tebbit, should have been one of her strongest supporters but instead fell out with her. Her triumphant 1987 victory contained the seeds of her downfall - hubris.Read more ›
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Moore has done it again. This is a brilliant account of Thatcher in her glory years. It is a presumably accurate, and very perceptive portrait of someone who - whether we like it or not - shaped her country. I come to this from a left perspective. I opposed Thatcher at the time and still think her ideas were wrong. But we cannot afford to ignore her and her legacy.
This is a nuanced account of the great political stories of the 80s - the miners' strike; nuclear weapons, privatisation. It shows that Thatcher often felt less secure than she seemed at the time. Moore mixes the personal with the political in a way that makes for a wonderfully convincing biography. And for those of us on the left, he gives some clues as to where we went wrong.
One anecdote is almost worth the price of the book. It concerns Thatcher's attitude to the then West German Chancellor, Helmut Kohl. Apparently, she once confidentially asked Moore: "Do you know the trouble with Helmut?" and without pausing for an answer, revealed: "he's a GERMAN!"
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‘Everything She Wants', the second volume of Charles Moore’s authorized biography of Margaret Thatcher, is even better than the first volume as here we follow a Prime Minister at the height of her power and influence.

Charles Moore benefits from the full authority of his subject and access to official and private papers, extensive interviews with friends and colleagues and the promise that Mrs Thatcher herself would never read even the first volume written during her lifetime. He has used that authority, information and freedom to both praise and criticise, combined with extensive research to write what must surely become not only the authorized but the definitive biography.

Like the first volume, it’s extremely well written, allowing it to be very detailed yet also easy and enjoyable to read with a surprising number of dryly humorous anecdotes. Personalities stand out through the clear writing, not just her own (revealed here as often far less confident than the public persona) but also the many colleagues, admirers, detractors, opponents and outright enemies she encountered. Whatever your politics, to understand modern Britain (and the modern world) it is essential to understand her time in office and the undoubted revolution she wrought and there’s no better way than through this superb biography.

This volume, starting from soon after the end of the Falklands war, is effectively bookended by her two landslide election victories in 1983 (effortlessly confident) and 1987 (unnecessarily nervous).
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