Pages: 672 (Paperback) ISBN: 0002558068 Pub: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd Pub date: 1996-07-25 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 158888
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Reader Reviews:Worthy but not essential reading (0/0 people found this helpful)I read this book after The Downing Street Years, and would generally agree with other reviews: it is simply not as compelling as its predecessor.
A road less travelled... (5/6 people found this helpful)In this book, the prequel to her more successful (and essentially more interesting) volume entitled 'The Downing Street Years', Margaret Thatcher gives us a glimpse into her life, and the events and people who shaped her, basically, who made her who she is. One learns about her time at university, her early days in politics from a personal standpoint (for instance, she used to do her own ironing to press dresses immediately before going out, as she couldn't afford to have them pressed, and other small details like this abound), early days in the government and then leading up to the time in opposition prior to the elections of 1979. Thatcher also adds a postscript to this book, completed after the account of her time as Prime Minister, in which she gives her prescriptions for a better Britain and Europe (in some ways, she might agree that her stance on the Eurocurrency is a la Nancy Reagan, i.e., 'Just say No!'). She has a few swipes at John Major, the man she helped into power, perhaps hoping to be able to be an active and effective agent from behind the scenes. Major retaliates a bit in his own autobiography. In all, unless one is really into British politics or Thatcher personally, this book could be easily missed. Read 'The Downing Street Years', and, as I've seen once can often pick this book up for some bargain-bin price, buy it so as to have the set. And one might peruse a chapter here and there. It does have a good style of writing, but goes on quite a bit. Historians will appreciate it, but I often wonder if politicians think that most will actually read through all this material, considering they are invariably written when the author is off the centre stage? Path to Power: One View (0/0 people found this helpful)Mrs. Thatcher formulates conservative political policy with precision; she also communicates it with persuasion. "Path to Power," the account of her pre-Downing street years, opens up some of the history behind those policy decisions. Throughout the book Thatcher marries personal insights with hard economic fact - trade unions, the Heath government, the press, fellow MP's, are all the subject of analysis interspersed with historical narrative of key events.
Not bad, but could do better! (8/12 people found this helpful)I opened this book with no admiration for Mrs Thatcher and only curiousity as an excuse for doing so. By the time I had closed it I found myself admiring her more than I had. In the book we find a warmer woman than we have been conditioned to believe -even by herself. She shows a deeper more inclusive vision that, if existed during her premiership, was sadly hidden. Throughout the book a woman of spirit is portrayed, a necessary trait in any politician who aspires to the highest level. Although the book made me more sympathetic to Mrs Thatcher's viewpoint this should not detract from the fact that the book manages to be fairly boring througout. A biography is not the place to argue out the pros and cons of incomes policy in such detail. Nor is there much humour in the book: few interesting stories retold, and there is a definite lack of the playfulness found in John Major's biography. At times there is a definite impression that the author is fudging. When Keith Joseph decides to forego stepping into the arena to challenge Edward Heath it is Margaret Thatcher herself who feels compelled to lead the charge for the right-thinking segment of the Party, which she believes will solve the spiritual crisis of the country: ambition is never mentioned. Her candidacy is described as an act for the good of Britain. Well it could be, but it's difficult to trust wholly altruistic motives. In the end Margaret Thatcher is likeable and she did what she believed in and you can't ask for more than that, but this book proves that Uncommon though she was, she is not Great. Her arguments have too many holes, her ideas lack roundedness with regards to human nature and there is no sustaining vision of where human beings should aim for beyond economic comfort and good managemnt such as there is in Nixon, Bevan, De Gaulle and other Great Leaders of the century. A wide-ranging synthesis of Thatcher's political aims (7/9 people found this helpful)The Path to Power is both a recollection by the author of her political formation and inspiration, and a forward-looking synthesis of her political, social, and economic thought. Her chapter on economic policy ('The Free Enterprise Revolution') offers a global perspective on contemporary trends and developments, and evinces a remarkable breadth of vision and clarity of thought. The reader quickly becomes immersed in a vivid and lucid account of a past which is inexorably moving forwards and seeking to shape the future. Shot through with humour and honesty, The Path to Power introduces the reader to a woman of sense and sensibility who never ceases to create and to achieve. Similar ProductsThe Course of My Life: The Autobiography of Edward Heath Margaret Thatcher: Iron Lady v. 2 Margaret Thatcher: The Great Speeches (Spoken Word) Margaret Thatcher: Iron Lady Vol 2 CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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