On the Back of an Envelope: A Life in Writing
Autor Peter Hennessy Editat de Polly Coupar-Hennessyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 mar 2026
As one of Britain’s foremost constitutional experts and contemporary historians, Peter Hennessy has spent his professional life unpicking the arcane world of Whitehall and Westminster. He began his career as a journalist for the Times, the Economist, and the Financial Times, developing a network of insider contacts who helped him shine a light on some of the dustiest corners of the British establishment. As a journalist, prize-winning contemporary historian, and political commentator, he has chronicled the workings of the British state with wit, affection, and a healthy sense of the absurd over a five-decade career. Now a crossbench peer, he has, in his own words, “moved in with his exhibits.” Hennessy is also a stalwart of BBC election night coverage and a regular commentator on BBC Radio 4, bringing a historical and constitutional perspective on current events.
In this new volume, he brings together selected journalism, unpublished lectures, and new writing alongside personal recollections and reflections on his time observing postwar Britain, how it is governed, and those who do the governing. He reflects on the making and unmaking of prime ministers from Attlee to Truss, life in the House of Lords, and the changing constitutional landscape in the wake of Brexit and amid uncertainty about the future of the Union. Interspersed with lectures, journalism, and new pieces, Hennessy also looks back at a fascinating career, reflecting on his own experiences as a young green graduate navigating the hard-nosed world of Fleet Street in the 1970s, bringing to life a cast of characters from a world now largely gone. He revisits his time as a public historian, academic, and crossbench peer with a levity reflected in his belief that history is “gossip with footnotes.”
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781914979323
ISBN-10: 191497932X
Pagini: 306
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Editura: HAUS PUBLISHING
Colecția Haus Publishing
ISBN-10: 191497932X
Pagini: 306
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Editura: HAUS PUBLISHING
Colecția Haus Publishing
Notă biografică
Peter Hennessy is one of the United Kingdom’s leading contemporary historians and is the Attlee Professor of Contemporary British History at Queen Mary University of London. He is the author of definitive books on the United Kingdom’s prime ministers, constitution, civil service, and intelligence agencies. His award-winning works of contemporary history include Never Again: Britain, 1945-51, Having it So Good: Britain in the Fifties, and Winds of Change: Britain in the Early Sixties. He is the series editor of the Haus Curiosities, and his books published with Haus include The Bonfire of the Decencies, The Complete Reflections, and Land of Shame and Glory. Polly Coupar-Hennessy is a freelance editor and writer.
Cuprins
Contents
Preface: (North) Circular thoughts xv
Part One: Formations
‘A nostalgist with a purpose’: Early life in North London and
Nympsfield 5
‘You never quite leave your first university’: Cambridge,
1966–9 16
Establishment and meritocracy (Queen Mary valedictory
lecture, 7 October 2014) 23
‘Do I detect a note of flattery in your voice?’: Becoming a
journalist, Boston and London, 1971–3 37
Growing up on The Times, 1974–84 47
‘A bloody nuisance but in the end he’s on the side of the
Queen’: Working the Whitehall beat, 1975–92 60
The fraction of the curve: Journalism and contemporary
history 72
Part Two: Crown and Constitution
The Queen as a Heineken-lager monarch: The parts of the
constitution that only she can reach ( Jubilee Lecture series,
Dulwich Picture Gallery, 3 January 2012) 87
The National Royal Service 105
A UK state of mind 112
Britain and Europe: The emotional deficit (Lecture given to
the University of Iceland/British Embassy, Reykjavik,
18 May 2007) 122
Keeping calm and carrying on: British crises since 1945 and
the special case of Brexit (Vice-Chancellor’s Lecture,
University of Birmingham, 12 June 2017) 129
On the Shelf: On Walter Bagehot’s The English Constitution
(The Sunday Times, 3 December 1995) 143
Speech on the Rwanda Bill (House of Lords, 29 January 2024) 146
Part Three: Prime Ministers, Parliament, and Politicians
Never did so many talk such drivel: On the quality of political
language today (The Independent, 25 September 1989) 152
What are prime ministers for? (Lecture at the Cheltenham
Literature Festival, 6 October 2017) 158
How to build a prime minister 174
The incomparable Clem (Lecture to mark the unveiling of the
statue of Clement Attlee, Queen Mary, 2011) 185
Harold Macmillan: Healer of the nation’s scars (The Listener,
8 January 1987) 196
Whitehall brief: Shades of a Home Counties Boudicca
(The Times, 17 May 1983) 200
Exit the Tigress (The Tablet, 13 April 2013) 203
The rise of Napoleon Blair (The Times, 25 September 2000) 208
Tony’s signature: The Blair style of government since 1997
(The Alistair Berkley Lecture, Robinson College,
Cambridge, 2006) 215
The undoing of prime ministers 230
Parliament and the state (The Speaker’s Lecture, Houses of
Parliament, 18 November 2014) 238
Part Four: On Crown Service
Why the best job in the Civil Service involves carrying the
prime minister’s bag (The Times, 10 November 1976) 252
The Cabinet Office: A magnificent piece of powerful
bureaucratic machinery (The Times, 8 March 1976) 259
Whitehall brief: How public servants keep it private
(The Times, 22 September 1981) 266
No 10 in the Jay-Lynn eye: The megaphone theory of ‘Yes
Minister’ (The Listener, 19 and 26 December 1985) 269
The Treasury: Bank manager and probation officer rolled
into one (The Times, 28 March 1977) 274
The Good and the Great: The most elevated and
distinguished casualties of the Thatcher years (The Listener,
7 February 1985) 283
Lord Franks: The lord who sits in judgement (The Times,
17 January 1983) 292
Royal commissions: New social foundations lack crucial
commissions (The Independent, 25 April 1988) 297
Afterthoughts 301
Acknowledgements 303
Also by Peter Hennessy 305
Preface: (North) Circular thoughts xv
Part One: Formations
‘A nostalgist with a purpose’: Early life in North London and
Nympsfield 5
‘You never quite leave your first university’: Cambridge,
1966–9 16
Establishment and meritocracy (Queen Mary valedictory
lecture, 7 October 2014) 23
‘Do I detect a note of flattery in your voice?’: Becoming a
journalist, Boston and London, 1971–3 37
Growing up on The Times, 1974–84 47
‘A bloody nuisance but in the end he’s on the side of the
Queen’: Working the Whitehall beat, 1975–92 60
The fraction of the curve: Journalism and contemporary
history 72
Part Two: Crown and Constitution
The Queen as a Heineken-lager monarch: The parts of the
constitution that only she can reach ( Jubilee Lecture series,
Dulwich Picture Gallery, 3 January 2012) 87
The National Royal Service 105
A UK state of mind 112
Britain and Europe: The emotional deficit (Lecture given to
the University of Iceland/British Embassy, Reykjavik,
18 May 2007) 122
Keeping calm and carrying on: British crises since 1945 and
the special case of Brexit (Vice-Chancellor’s Lecture,
University of Birmingham, 12 June 2017) 129
On the Shelf: On Walter Bagehot’s The English Constitution
(The Sunday Times, 3 December 1995) 143
Speech on the Rwanda Bill (House of Lords, 29 January 2024) 146
Part Three: Prime Ministers, Parliament, and Politicians
Never did so many talk such drivel: On the quality of political
language today (The Independent, 25 September 1989) 152
What are prime ministers for? (Lecture at the Cheltenham
Literature Festival, 6 October 2017) 158
How to build a prime minister 174
The incomparable Clem (Lecture to mark the unveiling of the
statue of Clement Attlee, Queen Mary, 2011) 185
Harold Macmillan: Healer of the nation’s scars (The Listener,
8 January 1987) 196
Whitehall brief: Shades of a Home Counties Boudicca
(The Times, 17 May 1983) 200
Exit the Tigress (The Tablet, 13 April 2013) 203
The rise of Napoleon Blair (The Times, 25 September 2000) 208
Tony’s signature: The Blair style of government since 1997
(The Alistair Berkley Lecture, Robinson College,
Cambridge, 2006) 215
The undoing of prime ministers 230
Parliament and the state (The Speaker’s Lecture, Houses of
Parliament, 18 November 2014) 238
Part Four: On Crown Service
Why the best job in the Civil Service involves carrying the
prime minister’s bag (The Times, 10 November 1976) 252
The Cabinet Office: A magnificent piece of powerful
bureaucratic machinery (The Times, 8 March 1976) 259
Whitehall brief: How public servants keep it private
(The Times, 22 September 1981) 266
No 10 in the Jay-Lynn eye: The megaphone theory of ‘Yes
Minister’ (The Listener, 19 and 26 December 1985) 269
The Treasury: Bank manager and probation officer rolled
into one (The Times, 28 March 1977) 274
The Good and the Great: The most elevated and
distinguished casualties of the Thatcher years (The Listener,
7 February 1985) 283
Lord Franks: The lord who sits in judgement (The Times,
17 January 1983) 292
Royal commissions: New social foundations lack crucial
commissions (The Independent, 25 April 1988) 297
Afterthoughts 301
Acknowledgements 303
Also by Peter Hennessy 305
Recenzii
"An entertaining, and often sobering collection. . . . In its pithy, personal yet panoptic tone, it is strongly reminiscent of Orwell’s wartime essays—with the author’s deep knowledge of contemporary politics and society worn very lightly."
"One of the country’s finest contemporary historians, Hennessy has tracked Westminster like no one else."
"Hennessy, unique among contemporary historians, understands politics from the inside out."
"No current historian is as versed as Hennessy in the internal cogs and springs of the British state, but he also has a keen eye for the luminous face of passing time."
"Hennessy is...driven by a romantic, almost sensual, fascination with British history, culture, and the quirky intricacies of British democracy and the government machine. His curiosity is insatiable, his memory infinitely capacious."
"What makes him such a deft public historian is the way he stitches patches of rich local colour into a narrative with the widest possible reach."