An excellent book about the Prime Minister has just been published. Unfortunately it is in German.
His capacity to win some of his severest critics round, and persuade them of his “greatness of soul”, helps explain his success.
But his new book conveys very well what is wrong with social media, and how it might be put right.
His columns from The Times are informed by his experience of what works, and more importantly, what doesn’t work.
Much of this book is true, and the author does not pretend fully to understand what is happening. And yet I think her pessimism is overdone.
A new collection of essays from Policy Exchange shows up some of the glaring defects of the planning system.
Disraeli’s impudence and audacity, demonstrated in this collection of his sayings, cast light on the present Prime Minister’s conduct.
But David Enrich’s new book does include a lot about how Deutsche Bank lent the President the money needed to look successful.
A new history of the magazine, which has just celebrated its 10,000th issue, relates how successive editors showed their “hatred of shams”.
This compilation of some of the terms he has used shows how, while rising to national leadership, he reassured outsiders that he was still one of them.
In his new book, John Lloyd makes the case for maintaining the Act of Union of 1707, and exposes the dark passions which motivate the SNP.
The Conservative victory in the general election of 2019, on a promise to Get Brexit Done, was a crushing defeat for them.