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Book Description
Tony Blair was America's closest ally in the war against Saddam Hussein. It was a powerful yet precarious position for the British Prime Minister, as he fought for his own future in backing George W. Bush and sending Britain's forces into Iraq. In this gripping day-by-day chronicle, Peter Stothard takes us behind the scenes as no one has before to reveal a unique portrait of a political leader under fire at the center of the world stage.
Over a period of four weeks in March and April of 2003, Tony Blair risked his status as the United Kingdom's most successful Labour Prime Minister for the chance of an unknowable place in history. Before Britain could help the United States, Blair faced a battle against his own voters, his own party, and his own allies in Europe. These were among the most tense and tumultuous weeks the world had seen since the fall of the Berlin Wall. In thirty days, Blair took on his opponents and won.
Through it all, Peter Stothard had unprecedented access to Blair, from Ten Downing Street and the House of Commons through the war summits in the Azores, Brussels, Belfast, and Camp David. No writer has ever been so close to a world head of state for so long at such a critical moment. Stothard brings us inside the corridors of power during this extraordinary time, offering a vivid, up-close view of an enormously popular leader facing the challenge of his life. How Blair spent those thirty days, how he fought for his own future as well as his vision of the civilized world, how he changed, and why he survived are at the heart of this riveting inside account.
From Publishers Weekly
In the days leading up to the recent Gulf War, Stothard was granted access to the besieged world of British Prime Minister Tony Blair. The result is in-depth political journalism with a touch of Upstairs Downstairs. Stothard, editor of the Times Literary Supplement and former editor of the Times of London, draws a critical but sympathetic portrait of Blair as a politician who is willing to risk his historical legacy in order to do what he believes to be the right thing: stick by President Bush and the unpopular (in Europe) attack on Iraq. It may come as a surprise to many American readers how close Stothard believes Blair was to losing his grip on power. They might also be surprised how close Blair, a political cousin of Bill Clinton, felt ideologically to Bush-and that the two shared a religious conviction to attack Iraq and oust Saddam Hussein. Blair, he writes, "has the powerful Christian seriousness of the not-quite-yet convert." Although the book is full of Briticisms-some members of Parliament are "runners," others "wobblers"-Stothard expertly shapes a narrative in which Blair manages to stick by his principles in the face of intense pressure, although he is now facing trouble regarding what he told the British public during those prewar days. At times, the book focuses on Blair's advisers and others who serve the prime minister at the expense of Blair himself, but Stothard offers scrutiny of one of the world's most important leaders during a critical juncture in his-and the world's-history.
From The New Yorker
Formerly the editor of the London Times, Stothard was given access to Tony Blair and his inner circle from the time of the last-minute attempts to get a second U.N. resolution on Iraq until the statues in Baghdad were toppled. Strangely, the closer one gets to Blair the more opaque his motives become, and even those around him seem uncertain whether his policies stem from quasi-religious conviction, shrewd realpolitik, or a simple desire to please. Stothard excels at showing the eccentric world of Downing Street, with its archaic, genteel rituals and sardonic banter (a "Robert Mugabe" is the frostiest possible handshake, reserved for a politician you really abominate; to "Kofi" means to wax idealistic about internationalism). Faced with the overwhelming might of their American allies, the English take refuge in irony: when Blair asks how he should begin a televised speech justifying the war, his right-hand man suggests, "My fellow Americans …"
About Author
Peter Stothard was the editor of the Times from 1992 to 2002 and the U.S. editor from 1989 to 1992. He is currently the editor of the Times Literary Supplement and lives in London.
Book Dimension
Height (mm) 234 Width (mm) 161
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这本书的阅读体验,更像是一次精心设计的迷宫探险,而不是一次轻松的旅程。我得承认,其中有几处情节的转折点,其逻辑跳跃性之大,让我不得不停下来,对着书页发呆,试图重建作者的思维路径。这种阅读的“难度”是故意的,它排斥了那些寻求即时满足的读者。但一旦你适应了它的节奏,开始享受这种“被挑战”的感觉时,那种智力上的愉悦感是其他许多作品无法比拟的。这本书对“记忆”和“身份”的主题进行了极其深入的探讨,探讨了一个人的本质究竟是由他回忆中的内容决定的,还是由他当下采取的行动决定的?书中几个核心人物似乎都在进行着一场对抗时间流逝和自我遗忘的战斗。特别是关于某个关键事件的描述,在不同的章节以完全不同的视角和细节重现,让你开始怀疑自己之前所相信的一切是否为真。这种对叙事可靠性的持续质疑,构建了全书最核心的悬念——不是“发生了什么”,而是“什么是真实的发生”。这是一部需要笔记本和时间来“啃食”的作品,它要求读者全身心投入,回报的则是对人性复杂性的更深层理解。
评分这本书的叙事节奏犹如夏日午后一场突如其来的雷阵雨,猛烈而令人措手不及。作者似乎对人性的复杂有着一种近乎病态的迷恋,将那些隐藏在日常表象之下的阴影毫不留情地撕开。我尤其欣赏它对环境氛围的营造,那种潮湿、压抑,仿佛随时都会有秘密从墙缝里渗出来的感觉,让人读起来不自觉地屏住呼吸。情节的推进并不线性,更像是碎片化的记忆闪回和现实场景的交织,初读时可能会感到有些迷失,但一旦抓住那条若有似无的情感主线,便会深陷其中,难以自拔。书中的角色塑造极其立体,没有绝对的善恶分明,每个人都在为自己的生存和欲望挣扎,他们的选择既可恨又可悲,让人在谴责之余,又忍不住去探究他们行为背后的逻辑和创伤。文字的雕琢达到了某种近乎诗意的境地,某些段落的描述,即便脱离了上下文,也依然具有强烈的画面感和冲击力,仿佛能闻到空气中弥漫的铁锈味和陈旧木头的气息。对于喜欢深度挖掘心理层面冲突,且对传统叙事结构不感冒的读者来说,这无疑是一次既痛苦又酣畅淋漓的阅读体验。它不会给你一个明确的答案,只会留下更多令人不安的回响,让你在合上书页后,仍旧在深夜里久久地咀嚼那些未解的谜团。
评分从纯粹的结构和技巧层面来看,这本书无疑是极其大胆和反传统的。它挑战了我们对于“故事”应该如何讲述的基本预设。叙述者像是站在一个摇晃的瞭望塔上,时而俯瞰全局,时而又被突如其来的浓雾笼罩,信息是经过高度提炼和过滤的,这迫使读者必须主动地参与到意义的构建过程中去。我发现自己频繁地停下来,回溯前文,试图将散落在各处的线索拼凑起来,这种主动的智力投入,使得阅读过程本身变成了一种解谜的乐趣。作者在处理时间线时展现了高超的功力,过去与现在、梦境与现实的边界被模糊化,形成了一种复调式的叙事效果。这种处理方式避免了平铺直叙的枯燥,但同时也要求读者具备极高的专注度,任何一次分神都可能导致对情节核心的误判。更值得称道的是,书中对“沉默”的运用达到了炉火纯青的地步,那些未曾言明的、被压抑的情感,往往比直接的对白更具杀伤力,它们像冰山一样,主体深藏于水面之下,但仅仅是露出的一角,就足以暗示其庞大的体积和潜在的危险。这是一部需要“精读”而非“泛读”的作品,每一次重读都会带来新的发现,仿佛剥开一层又一层的洋葱皮,最终面对的或许只是更深一层的虚无,但这探索的过程本身就已价值连城。
评分我很少读到像这样,在语言层面投入了如此巨大精力的作品。作者的词汇选择充满了古典的韵味,但句法结构却又大胆地采用了现代主义的破碎和断裂。这种古典与现代的碰撞,使得文本本身带有一种既庄重又叛逆的气质。阅读起来,节奏感非常鲜明,有时是一泻千里的长句,将人物的心理活动连绵不绝地铺陈开来,让你仿佛被卷入一场意识的洪流;而有时,又是极短、极精悍的句子,像冰锥一样精准地刺穿当前的场景,留下难以磨灭的印记。书中关于“疏离感”的描绘达到了一个新的高度,人物之间的交流往往充满了误解和表面化的礼貌,真正的交流似乎永远被一层无形的玻璃隔开。这种对人际隔阂的精准捕捉,让身处现代社会的我感同身受。它没有试图提供浪漫化的解决方案,而是坦然接受了这种隔阂是人类经验的一部分。全书的基调是深沉的,但在这深沉之中,作者又巧妙地嵌入了一些黑色幽默的片段,这些笑声非但没有缓解紧张气氛,反而因为其突兀而更显悲凉,像是在一片漆黑的房间里,突然闪烁了一下又不立刻熄灭的火柴光芒。这部作品,无疑是写给那些敢于直面内心荒芜的读者的。
评分说实话,初翻开这本书时,我被它那种略显晦涩的开篇弄得有些不适应,它没有立刻抛出引人入胜的钩子,而是用大段的环境描写和哲学式的沉思开场,让人感觉像误入了一片未经开垦的荒原。但坚持读下去,你会发现作者的笔触其实极其细腻入微,那种对日常细节的捕捉,精确得像是显微镜下的观察。比如对某种特定光线穿过百叶窗投射在地板上的阴影形态的描绘,或者对一次握手时指尖温度变化的不厌其烦的记录,这些看似琐碎的细节,却是构建人物内心世界、暗示潜在危机的关键。这本书的魅力在于它的“克制”,它从不直接告诉你角色在想什么,而是通过他们如何系鞋带、如何选择饮品的温度、如何回避他人的目光,来间接揭示其深层焦虑和伪装。这种写实主义的基调,与偶尔出现的超现实主义的意象并置,产生了一种奇特的张力,让人感觉世界既真实又扭曲。它对社会结构中隐形的权力运作和群体心理的剖析尤为深刻,让人在阅读时不得不反思自己日常生活中所接受的那些“常识”是否站得住脚。它不提供慰藉,它只提供一种近乎冷酷的清醒。
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