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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Andrew Blick , George JonesPublisher: Biteback Publishing Imprint: Biteback Publishing ISBN: 9781849545723ISBN 10: 1849545723 Pages: 368 Publication Date: 22 July 2013 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsThere are no more effective shiners of flashlights to hidden back rooms than Blick and Jones and there is no more important back room than the Prime Minister's in 10 Downing Street. From Walpole to Cameron the authors anatomise in meticulous detail the development of what might well now be described as a Prime Minister's department that dare not speak its name. Lord Hennessy, Attlee Professor of Contemporary British History, Queen Mary, University of London. It is a major work, impressive in its scope and the depth of its analysis and understanding. Nothing will replace it. Lord Donoughue, senior policy adviser to Harold Wilson and James Callaghan. [T]his book is an extraordinarily well-researched and at times very readable chronicle of the people who have stood at the elbow of prime ministers since Walpole. Blick and Jones have knocked up an impressive list of interviewees, too, and it shows in the formidable breadth of this work... [F]or a political aficionado it more than merits an evening read by the fire. Bobby Friedman, The Spectator There are no more effective shiners of flashlights to hidden back rooms than Blick and Jones and there is no more important back room than the Prime Minister's in 10 Downing Street. From Walpole to Cameron the authors anatomise in meticulous detail the development of what might well now be described as a Prime Minister's department that dare not speak its name. Lord Hennessy, Attlee Professor of Contemporary British History, Queen Mary, University of London. It is a major work, impressive in its scope and the depth of its analysis and understanding. Nothing will replace it. Lord Donoughue, senior policy adviser to Harold Wilson and James Callaghan. """There are no more effective shiners of flashlights to hidden back rooms than Blick and Jones and there is no more important back room than the Prime Minister's in 10 Downing Street. From Walpole to Cameron the authors anatomise in meticulous detail the development of what might well now be described as a Prime Minister's department that dare not speak its name."" Lord Hennessy, Attlee Professor of Contemporary British History, Queen Mary, University of London. ""It is a major work, impressive in its scope and the depth of its analysis and understanding. Nothing will replace it."" Lord Donoughue, senior policy adviser to Harold Wilson and James Callaghan. "" [T]his book is an extraordinarily well-researched and at times very readable chronicle of the people who have stood at the elbow of prime ministers since Walpole. Blick and Jones have knocked up an impressive list of interviewees, too, and it shows in the formidable breadth of this work... [F]or a political aficionado it more than merits an evening read by the fire."" Bobby Friedman, The Spectator ""As the authors of this excellent book demonstrate, from what we know of our first real prime minister...all PMs have had an array of advisers."" Total Politics ""[E]nlightening and impressive in its breadth and scope... The story of prime ministerial aides raise lots of questions, some of which Blick and Jones consciously seek to explore, some which are left hanging...The book greatly benefits from the considerable period over which the authors have been studying this topic...As such, the book provides a good overview of many of the most interesting or most prominent aides...any aspiring prime ministerial aide could do worse than read this book."" Catherine Haddon, LSE Review of Books" Author InformationAndrew Blick is Lecturer in Politics and Contemporary History at the Centre for Political and Constitutional Studies, King's College London. He worked as an assistant in the Prime Minister's Office and has written extensively about British politics. His previous publications include an analysis of the UK Cabinet Manual and a collaboration with George Jones on the history of the office of Prime Minister. George Jones has been Emeritus Professor of Government at LSE since 2003 and was Professor of Government between 1976 and 2003. He has authored, co-authored and edited a number of works on British government including a biography of Herbert Morrison, an analysis of prime-ministerial systems in western Europe and a study of private secretaries. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |