Posts Tagged ‘Out now’

The Yes Minister Miscellany by Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

“Yes Minister was more than a sit-com, it was a crash course in Contemporary Political Studies – it opened the lid on the way the Government operated. It remains the most quintessentially British of the British sitcoms.” Arnando Iannucci

Coinciding with our fantastic competition to win tickets to see Yes, Prime Minister at London’s Gielgud Theatre, Biteback’s Yes Minister Miscellany is out now in paperback.

Yes Minister, together with its sequel Yes Prime Minister, is one of the most popular and critically successful British sitcoms of all time, largely due to its fascinatingly accurate observations of the sparring between Paul Eddington’s naive minister, Jim Hacker, and Nigel Hawthorne’s infernally cunning Permanent Secretary, Sir Humphrey Appleby. Highly influential, the programme has coloured the way we look at politics today, and how politicians see themselves.

This brilliantly funny book includes lists of interesting and little-known facts about the series; Sir Humphrey’s finest obfuscations; how to be a civil servant; translating civil service speak; how to stall a minister; and other essential tips from the show. Introduced by Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn, (also behind the Gielgud’s wonderful new show) the Yes Minister Miscellany also includes important dates, classic scenes, and the legendary Margaret Thatcher sketch in its entirety. This is the perfect book for fans of great British comedy!

The Yes Minister Miscellany by Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn is available to buy from the Biteback website, priced £6.99

Don’t forget to enter our terrific competition to win tickets to see Yes, Prime Minister!!

Making the Difference: Essays in honour of Shirley Williams

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

“Prime Ministers apart (and not all of them), Shirley is possibly the best known politician in Britain . . . still engaged at eighty, witty, humane and determined.” Andrew Duff

If you follow Biteback Publishing Events you may have had the chance yesterday to visit the Liberal Democrat Image stand at Conference where Shirley Williams could be found signing copies of new book Making the Difference.

Making the Difference: Essays in Honour of Shirley Williams has been edited by Andrew Duff and published by Biteback to celebrate the life and career of one of the most influential women in British politics.

To mark the occasion of Baroness Williams’s eightieth birthday in 2010, Making the Difference comprises a collection of essays by her peers, contemporaries and protégés on the themes and issues she has campaigned on during the course of an inspirational career in politics spanning five decades.

Andrew Duff, has brought together an impressive group of contributors for this important book (including Peter Hennessey, Germaine Greer, Charles Kennedy and Menzies Campbell), demonstrating the esteem and affection felt for this remarkable politician.

Making the Difference demonstrates the influence Shirley Williams has had during her extraordinary life – as an MP and minister, as a peer, as a Catholic and as a woman.

Making the Difference is available to buy from the Biteback website, priced £19.99

Real-life espionage is nothing like James Bond – actually it is, says Mick Smith

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

By Mick Smith

The resurgence of interest in espionage comes at an opportune time for us here at Biteback. It has been fuelled by the FBI’s discovery of Russian intelligence service sleeper cells spread across America, including the beautiful blonde Russian spy Anna Chapman, and the tragic, and still unexplained, case of a GCHQ officer murdered in Pimlico. We expect spy thrillers to be laced with murder, mystery and the odd femme fatale, but after years of being told that “the real stuff is nothing like James Bond”, it comes as a bit of a surprise to discover that it very often is.

Certainly, as far as my latest book SIX: A History of Britain’s Secret Service, is concerned, there is very little evidence that “it’s nothing like James Bond”, rather the reverse. SIX is so full of murder and mayhem that we made it the sub-title of the book, and this first part, covering the period from the Service’s foundation in 1909 to the outbreak of the Second World War, is packed with Boy’s Own heroes, and noir-style femmes fatales, many of whom have never been heard of before.

But SIX is not the only espionage book we’re publishing. We have just published the three opening titles of our exciting new series Dialogue Espionage Classics, with several more titles already on the stocks waiting to go to print, one of them a book that the British government completely suppressed when it first came out, of which more very soon. (more…)

A little taster of Biteback’s new release We Ate All the Pies

Friday, August 27th, 2010

To whet your appetite, here’s a little taster of our new book We Ate All the Pies by football-mad John Nicholson. (Sorry for the food puns, couldn’t help ourselves!)

“Pies have become a legendary football ritual that many feel obliged, compelled or delighted to indulge in. Recently, it was claimed on the BBC news website that one in three people who went to watch Scottish football had a pie on match day. That’d be over 20,000 just at Celtic Park! A volume of pies so huge it would need to be transported in the sort of big trucks normally reserved for Emerson, Lake and Palmer in their seventies pomp.

The first pie I ever ate at Ayresome Park was memorable. It was a freezing cold afternoon in 1974 – it always seemed to be freezing at the Boro; I don’t recall one warm day in the whole of the 1970s. As I bit into it, a belch of hot air was released in a steamy cloud into the smog-filled grey afternoon. It smelled fantastically savoury and meaty but it tasted somewhat different. First, the filling was bouncy, as though partly comprised of rubber bands. This is because it was padded out with gristle: eyes, lungs and arseholes. The flavour was peculiarly tangy and unlike anything I had ever tasted previously. It was salty but oddly perfumed. Looking back, this was probably because it was past its sell-by date – not that such a thing as a sell-by date existed back then. But I was used to vaguely unpleasant food at home so I ate it all.

It left me with a sore throat! I’m no doctor but I’m sure a pie shouldn’t make your throat sore. God knows what was in that thing but whatever it was it wasn’t in me long as it had exited out of my arse at speed a couple of hours later. (more…)

Failing Intelligence by Brian Jones

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

FAILING INTELLIGENCE: The true story of how we were fooled into going to war in Iraq by Brian Jones

“Compelling and depressing stuff from the Whitehall expert on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction.” Professor Peter Hennessy

This book provides the truth about Iraq’s WMD and how the British government used and misused intelligence to lead us into war, by the UK’s most senior and experienced intelligence expert on nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.

As the former head of the UK Defence Intelligence Staff’s nuclear, biological and chemical section, Brian Jones is ideally placed to explain how Britain was taken to war and the way in which the intelligence reporting on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction (WMD) was manipulated to justify Saddam Hussein’s removal from power.

Jones calls on his own experience and knowledge, a variety of leaked documents, and the expert testimony given to a series of inquiries, including the current Chilcot inquiry, to examine how and why Tony Blair and George W. Bush managed to deceive their legislatures and their electorates into believing that Iraqi WMD were a real threat that could attack the West within 45 minutes.

He describes how Blair and Bush sought to use subsequent inquiries to cover up their own culpability in the deception, in order to facilitate re-election and keep their jobs. In conclusion, Jones pulls together the lessons that should have been learned both in relation to the use of intelligence to justify policy-making and with regard to broader international issues of security and governance.

Failing Intelligence is available to buy from the Biteback website priced £9.99

Praise for SIX from ARRSE

Friday, August 13th, 2010

Thanks to ARRSE (The Army Rumour Service) for the fantastic review of Michael Smith’s SIX: A History of Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service.

“This is a fine book. On one level, it is a rattling good yarn which does what it says on the cover; on another level, Smith’s research illuminates the sometimes complex (and to the indifferent, dull) bureaucratic manoeuvring which is a feature of any intelligence organisation and on a third level, it is a fascinating insight into the people who came together to create one of the world’s foremost intelligence services.”

To read the full review, click here.

SIX: A History of Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service. Part 1: Murder and Mayhem is available to buy from Biteback, priced £19.99

Jonathan Isaby writes from ConHome about the avid politico’s summer read

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Some holiday reading for the avid politico.

Whilst some of you will want to take some trashy fiction to the beach as you get away for some sun this month, I don’t doubt that some ConHome readers will want to take the time to catch up on some political reading while they’re away.

And one book which fits into the latter category is Nicholas Jones’ Campaign 2010: The Making of the Prime Minister. (more…)

Francis Beckett contemplates the reaction to Baby boomers

Friday, August 6th, 2010

My book What Did the Baby Boomers Ever Do For Us? seems to have divided commentators strictly along age lines.

People of my age – the baby boomers, the children of the sixties – feel I’ve betrayed my own comrades for a mess of pottage. The Guardian’s Catherine Bennett asks pointedly: “Will his personal contribution be enough to stop a future young carer lashing him to a commode or similar?” Have I given myself an unfair advantage in my old age by crawling in advance to those who will look after me? That wasn’t the intention. And I promise to behave gallantly should I see anyone lashing Ms Bennett to a commode.

Bryn Jones and Mike O’Donnell retort that sixties radicals “joined and energised the radical labour movement campaigns to defend and advance the welfare state during the 70s and 80s.” But they didn’t. They brought their sixties student politics into the unions in those two decades, and it was their intolerance, sectarianism and self-righteousness that brought the unions to their knees by the mid 1980s.

On the other side, the much more youthful Laurie Penny at the New Statesman shook with indignation as she read the book. It “lays out an incisive case for how my parents’ generation squandered the good times and betrayed the courage of the Attlee settlement” she writes. And the Evening Standard’s Rosamund Irwun - nearer in age to Ms Penny than to Ms Bennett – says: “Another boomer has belatedly woken up to the problems they have left us — Francis Beckett in his brilliant new book, What Did the Baby Boomers Ever Do for Us?”

None of them, however, give me credit for explaining just why the sixties generation failed. It was to do with schools in the late 1950s and early 1960s – a point upon which I shall expand soon in the Times Educational Supplement.

Look out for further comment by Francis on his website.

What did the babyboomers ever do for us? is available from Biteback, priced £12.99.

David Cameron: A past master of the punchy one-liner

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Writes the author of Campaign 2010: The Making of the Prime Minister Nicholas Jones

Any suggestion that the Prime Minister’s headline-grabbing remarks about Gaza and Pakistan were slips of the tongue by an uncontrolled ‘loudmouth’ could not be further from the truth.

David Cameron cut his political teeth crafting punchy one-liners for the likes of John Major and it is farfetched to imagine he would launch himself on the world’s stage without having thought through the messages he wanted to deliver and how he intended to present them.

Cameron’s accusation that Pakistan was ‘looking both ways’ in the battle against terrorism – which set the framework for his meeting at Chequers with the Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari – was as pointed as his description of Gaza as a ‘prison camp’.

David Miliband, the shadow Foreign Secretary, rebuked the Prime Minister for having a ‘loose tongue’ and for ‘going off script’ during his visits to Turkey and India. He considered Cameron had created an international mess with his bluster: there was a ‘big difference between straight talking and being a loudmouth’.

What Miliband failed to acknowledge was that Cameron’s skill in crafting punchy soundbites was what originally marked him out as an up-and-coming political strategist after he joined Conservative Central Office at the age of twenty-two.

His job was to hunt for embarrassing quotes and slip-ups by Labour politicians and then ‘think of killer facts and snappy one-liners’ which John Major could use to attack Neil Kinnock.

He was credited with having sharpened up Major’s performance at Prime Minister’s questions and his ability to identify timely anti-Labour ammunition and transform it into ‘razor-sharp script’ lines won him promotion to head of the party’s political section and then the job of special adviser to the then Chancellor, Norman Lamont, and later the Home Secretary, Michael Howard.

Cameron’s track record suggests that his one-liners are entirely calculated. He had every intention of reminding Israel of its obligations to Gaza and of Pakistan’s responsibility to do more to tackle home-grown terrorism.

Early on in his bid for the Conservative leadership Cameron found a neat way to disarm critics of Eton and Oxford education: ‘Yes, I know I have this terrible CV…’

Not surprisingly Cameron knew instinctively how to woo the White House press corps after his first meeting with the US President.

Barrack Obama opened their joint news conference with a sombre seven-minute resume of US/UK relations. Less than a minute into his response, Cameron complimented the President on the tidiness of children’s bedrooms in the White House family quarters.

‘If the President of the USA can get his children to tidy their bedrooms, it is time the British Prime Minister did exactly the same’. When Obama signalled his encouragement, the Prime Minister looked to straight to camera to send a message home.

‘They should be in bed by now…but if not, they have notice from the President’.

Cameron’s easy-going style is beguiling but there should be no mistaking the message of his soundbites: they deliver what he meant to say.

Campaign 2010: The Making of the Prime Minister is available now from Biteback, priced £9.99 and you can look at Nick Jones’s website here.

SIX: A History of Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service by Michael Smith – out now

Monday, July 19th, 2010

9781906447007Part one of a major two-part history of Britain’s external intelligence community by the acclaimed writer, award-winning journalist and defence correspondent for The Sunday Times, Michael Smith.

This first part of acclaimed author Mick Smith’s epic unauthorised history of Britain’s external intelligence community begins with the creation of the Secret Service Bureau in 1909, charged with controlling intelligence within Britain and overseas, and establishing through spies the strength of the Imperial German army and navy. This naturally came to the fore during World War One. Between the wars the service really established itself, restyling itself the “Secret Intelligence Service”. Under the aegis of the diplomatic service, the SIS expanded its network of European spies in order to counter the threat of Russian Bolshevism. In 1918 an operation to overthrow the Bolshevik government by SIS agents failed badly. With the ascent of the Nazis, the SIS switched its focus to the threat of German aggression, recruiting sources within the German government and admiralty. SIX tells the complete story of the service’s birth and early years, including the tragic, untold tale of what happened to Britain’s extensive networks in Soviet Russia between the wars. It reveals for the first time how the playwright and MI6 agent Harley Granville Barker bribed the Daily News to keep Arthur Ransome in Russia, and the real reason Paul Dukes returned there. It shows development of “tradecraft” and the great personal risk officers and their agents took, far from home and unprotected. In Salonika, for example, Lieutenant Norman Dewhurst realised it was time to leave when he opened his door to find one of his agents hanging dismembered in a sack.

This first part of SIX takes us up to the eve of the conflict, using hundreds of previously unreleased files and interviews with key players to show how one of the world’s most secretive of secret agencies originated and developed into something like the MI6 we know today. The second part, published in Spring 2011, will tell the story from the outbreak of World War Two to the present.

SIX: A History of Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service, Part 1: Murder and Mayhem 1909-1939, by Michael Smith is available to buy HERE.