Review:
aNicholas Wapshott, with access to their unpublished correspondence, gives us a nuancedaand immensely readablea portrait of how Reagan and Thatcher resolved their differences in leading the world out of incipient chaos. This is a shrewd and affecting portrait.a
aTina Brown, author of "The Diana Chronicles"
aI can recommend a rattling good read with lots of new material on their previously private meetings and correspondence.a
a"National Review"
aBriskly written, perceptive, and, ultimately, moving.a
a"New York Sun"
aWapshott is insightful and exhaustive.a
a"Publishers Weekly"
?Nicholas Wapshott, with access to their unpublished correspondence, gives us a nuanced?and immensely readable? portrait of how Reagan and Thatcher resolved their differences in leading the world out of incipient chaos. This is a shrewd and affecting portrait.?
?Tina Brown, author of "The Diana Chronicles"
?I can recommend a rattling good read with lots of new material on their previously private meetings and correspondence.?
?"National Review"
?Briskly written, perceptive, and, ultimately, moving.?
?"New York Sun"
?Wapshott is insightful and exhaustive.?
?"Publishers Weekly"
About the Author:
Nicholas Wapshott is an editor at the New York Sun and the former New York bureau chief for the Times of London.
Simon Vance has recorded over four hundred audiobooks and has earned over twenty AudioFile Earphones Awards, including for his narration of Scaramouche by Rafael Sabatini. He is also the recipient of five coveted Audie Awards, including one for The King's Speech by Mark Logue and Peter Conradi, and he was named an AudioFile Best Voice of 2009.
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