Posts Tagged ‘Autobiography’

‘Buy the book, you’ll enjoy it’… and we didn’t say that!

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

The reason why Publicity and Editorial are always distinct departments of the publishing industry came to us magically as we were reading an article in the Daily Telegraph. It’s to stop editors telling everyone how awesome they are. In this particular instance though, it would appear that those editorial types have little to take credit for.

A large part of Daniel Hannan’s review of Fighting Bull, the autobiography of the UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage, praises the ‘authenticity’ of the voice within the book. Clearly, Nigel’s fascinating story, of a typical Home Counties boy who became leader of a party that came second in the last European election, remained intact throughout the editing process. In fact, it is so real that the editors appear to have left the book to speak for itself in Farage’s unique tone. And the conclusion that Hannan reaches, having read such an ‘earthy, Hogarthian and utterly honest’ book, is that ‘Nigel Farage is Denis Thatcher on speed.’

Whatever that means, Hannan loves it. We could put select, snappy quotes from his review here, maybe those bits that say…

‘Like most people with the popular touch, Nigel is savvier than you realise at first. His life story pulses with the ideas that actuate him: libertarianism, British particularism and (in the sense of championing the people against the elites) populism.’

Or

‘I wonder whether his party realises how much it owes him… buy the book: you’ll enjoy it.’

…but we’re too modest for that, so you can read the whole review if you like.

Get Nigel Farage’s Fighting Bull here for £17.99.

FIGHTING BULL, the Autobiography of Nigel Farage, published 25th March

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

9781849540391“I did not enter politics out of philanthropy but rather as an extension of my own annoyance and resentment at having inherited freedoms infringed by power-crazed idiots spouting gibberish. It gives me particular pleasure, then, to know that we have empowered many others and caused them too to doubt the authority whereby such people presume to grant us rights where we can manage perfectly well with innate freedoms.”

In an age of colourless bureaucrats, Nigel Farage is a politician you are unable to ignore, causing controversy and admiration in equal measure. What cannot be denied is the effect he has had on British and European politics. A fun-loving iconoclast whose motto is “work hard and play harder”, Farage’s charismatic leadership and determination to battle the forces of anti-libertarianism have made him a Robin Hood figure to many, and propelled his party, UKIP, into a position of real power in the country.

A passionate advocate of living life to the full, Farage’s journey into politics has been fuelled by a desire to resist unnecessary authority. He resents being told what to do, especially by faceless bureaucrats in Europe.

Told with Farage’s customary wit and humour, Fighting Bull is a thoroughly engaging look at an extraordinary life, including the spills – a near fatal car accident and surviving testicular cancer – and the thrills – a boisterous boyhood in London and a career as a City trader, to battling bureaucracy in Europe and defending the nation’s hard-won freedoms against erosion from without and within.

His account of his journey into the Brussels labyrinth is compelling. The book tells of loyalty and treachery in his own ranks and of his struggle to overcome media preconceptions. It features sometimes hilarious and often terrifying encounters with a stellar supporting cast, including Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, Nicolas Sarkozy,José Manuel Barroso, and UKIP’s short-lived, silver-gilt mascot – Robert Kilroy-Silk. In September 2009 Nigel Farage announced he would stand against John Bercow, the newly elected Speaker of the House of Commons, in his Buckingham constituency in the next election, despite a modern convention that the speaker is not challenged for re-election. Fighting Bull is a candid, colourful life story by a fascinating and controversial character. It also shows that one fearless, determined individual can still make a difference.

Paul Flynn MP – The Unusual Suspect

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

9781849540179

On March 1st, we are very proud to be publishing The Unusual Suspect, the memoirs of one of Parliament’s most outspoken backbench MPs. This book currently features in a major 2-part serialisation in the Mail on Sunday.

Paul Flynn is one of Westminster’s wittiest and most irreverent bloggers, commentators and campaigners. Funny, fresh and revealing, in The Unusual Suspect Labour’s long-serving MP for Newport West (and current Welsh MP of the Year), tells the whole truth of the vanities, triumphs and excesses of the political shark pool.

From hiding Rhodri Morgan’s underwear at Cardiff train station, to his unlikely alliance with rap group Goldie Lookin’ Chain, Flynn has long been an unorthodox but influential presence at Westminster. Never one to fit in to suit political convenience, his tenure in office has been characterised by a campaigning zeal which has seen him become a giant-killing enemy of vested interests. The stupidity of drugs laws, the deceptions of the pharmaceutical industry, the shame of politicians on the make and Labour’s misconceived foreign adventures in Afghanistan and Iraq have been just a few of the issues that have aroused his indignation. His passions have often kept him off message too, and The Unusual Suspect describes his profound dissillusion with New Labour and its betrayal of the party’s socialist principles.

In this hilarious, yet deeply personal book, Paul Flynn describes with his customary panache the joys and tragedies of his life, all intertwined with political hope and chicanery. A quarter of a century of Flynn’s work with the icons and knaves of parliament has renewed his idealism and conviction that ‘the best has yet to be’.

INSIDE OUT My story of betrayal and cowardice at the heart of New Labour, by Peter Watt. Published 25th January

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

Inside Out: My story of betrayal and cowardice at the heart of New Labour