by PhilipCollins (Author)
By The Times columnist and acclaimed author of When They Go Low, We Go High. Start Again is a life-raft for all those who find themselves politically adrift and a rallying cry for a better kind of politics.
Britain is today divided old against young, class against class, region against region, nativist against cosmopolitan, rich against poor and London against the rest. Our country is divided by generation, by education, by place and by attitude.
Politics needs to be turned off and started again.
In this time of tumult, when Britain is wrestling with the question of what sort of nation it wishes to be, its politics is stuck.
Power is hoarded by a distant and unresponsive centre and our two largest political parties have both been captured by those on their outer edges.
Too many of us have been left politically homeless.
In Start Again, Philip Collins, Times journalist and until recently a lifelong Labour voter, offers a road map to a different political destination.
Drawing on lessons from history Collins proposes new answers to today's most urgent questions: questions of education, work, health, housing, security, nationhood, and of how we can achieve a better future.
Hopeful, indignant and inspirational, this is a book for anyone who feels that politics no longer speaks to them.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Publisher: Fourth Estate
Published: 18 Oct 2018
ISBN 10: 0008312648
ISBN 13: 9780008312640
Praise for When They Go Low, We Go High:
`Anyone interested in the past, present and future of speeches and speechwriting will find it a fascinating read. For those of us who like nothing better than to marvel at effective use of an anaphoric tricolon, it's an absolute must.' Spectator
`Wonderfully sharp and well informed' Craig Brown, Mail on Sunday
`It deserves to find a home in many Christmas stockings, in the library of anyone interested in oratory or political theory, and on the odd A-level reading list... he brings to his analyses a deep understanding of the pragmatics of speech-making' Guardian
`Collins... understands intimately the mechanics of rhetoric. He believes that we, as human beings, possess the capacity to extract ourselves from the swamp in which we have sunk. Great speeches, the author suggests, are the solution to Trump' The Times
`Perfect conference reading' Andrew Marr
'No writer today understands the art of the speech so well as Philip Collins. His brilliant new book is an urgent tour through 2000 years of human history, revealing how the greatest addresses were shaped, while reminding us that politics and politicians still matter, and that when the greatest men and women speak to us, their words have the power to change the world'
Dan Jones, bestselling author of The Plantagenets
Philip Collins is a columnist for The Times and an associate editor of Prospect magazine. He was chief speech writer to Prime Minister Tony Blair in 10 Downing Street between 2004 and 2007 and has subsequently written keynote speeches for a range of senior politicians, leaders of charities and NGOs and Chief Executive Officers. Mr Collins is the author of The Art of Speeches and Presentations and pioneered the analysis of major speeches in The Times.