Pages: 828 (Paperback) ISBN: 0006379559 Pub: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd Pub date: 1993-09-13 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 295681
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Reader Reviews:Review of Wilson by Pimlott (4/5 people found this helpful)Pimlott claims his book, offers an ‘unofficial’ or ‘unauthorized’ account of Harold Wilson’s life, where he is not restricted by family pressures on content. While this statement is questionable, Pimlott offers an interesting approach to understanding the life of Wilson, exploring both his political and private lives. Throughout the book runs a number of central themes; Wilson’s vision of socialism, his relationship with the party, and in particular his rivalry with Gaitskell, and whether or not Wilson can be considered a great statesman. Curiously unsatisfying biography of former Labour leader (3/4 people found this helpful)Pimlott's chef d'oeuvre on Harold Wilson is something of a disappointment. Despite running to 750 pages (in its hardback version), the former British Prime Minister remains something of an enigma to the reader at the end of the book, albeit that 'enigmatic' is one of the epithets that is most apposite in describing the winner of 4 out of 5 General Elections contested as Leader of the Labour Party. The 'let down' of the book is that it is almost myopically concerned with the internecine power struggles in the upper echelons of the Parliamentary Labour Party between 1950 and the mid-'seventies to the exclusion of analysis of what Labour achieved legislatively from 1964-70 and 1974-76. Some of the landmark social reforms enacted by Wilson's Governments, such as the abolition of capital punishment, the legalisation of abortion and the decriminalisation of consensual adult male homosexuality, are only given en passant treatment by Pimlott. Treatment of the management of the British Economy under the Wilson Governments is barely more lucid. After reading it one knows more about Wilson than prior to embarking on it, but one is left curiously unsatisfied, and inclined to turn to Wilson's own accounts of his Prime Ministerial carrier for greater enlightenment. An excellent biography of a key polician (3/3 people found this helpful)With his biography of Hugh Dalton ben Pimlott had already set the benchmark for serious academics writing biographies that are both accessible to a mass readership and valuable texts containing serious primary research and new insgihts. With his biography of the great but flawed Labour leader and Prime Minister he nearly attains the same standard again. Wilson is a compulsive figure, manipulative, over-confident yet paranoid, in the end running out of energy in the job he'd always wanted. Pimlott's biography is masterful in both putting Wilson into his historical context, and showing Wilson's effect on the evolution of the Labuor Party and British government. Similar ProductsGlimmers of Twilight: Murder, Intrigue and Passion at the Court of Harold Wilson The Prime Minister: The Job and Its Holders Since 1945 CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> General
Books -> Subjects -> Society, Politics & Philosophy -> Government & Politics -> Political Science & Ideology -> Socialism Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin) Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Paperback
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