The former Speaker’s autobiography is a disappointment. He writes as he talks – and after a time this becomes wearisome.
A new book explains why building land is prohibitively expensive.
Its future is not yet in the bag, but it has made a remarkably assured start. Much now depends on the genius of its editors.
Seldon’s latest book, composed in only six months, will at best be a quarry on which future historians can draw.
A new study asks good questions without providing good answers.
The patriotic, Brexit-voting working class, neglected for decades by Labour, must now be championed by the Conservatives.
The former Prime Minister also failed to grasp that Merkel was not going to do anything very much for him.
Never before has so much material been assembled from such a wealth of sources about the Leader of the House.
Owen Bennett sets out the known facts about an astonishing Tory.
A self-help book for business people terrified of appearing before MPs shows how much more formidable select committees have become.
In his new book he sets out to rescue those virtues from the mockery inflicted on them in the 20th century.
A new biography of the ruthless, devious, vulgar, brilliant newspaperman who in 1940 became Minister of Aircraft Production.
Tim Bouverie has written a fascinating account of the slide towards the Second World War.
Jon Davis and John Rentoul’s new book contains valuable material, but cannot efface Iraq, or the former Prime Minister’s self-righteousness.