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Anthony Horowitz
Anthony Horowitz’s new novel, The Power of Five: Necropolis (Walker Books) is out on 30th October.
Political suicide
18.04.08
They were all there in Clerkenwell, just up the road from where I live, last month: Menzies Campbell, David Blunkett, Claire Short and Paddy Ashdown. My local Books Etc was closing down and the pile of unsold political memoirs could have stopped the traffic.
Whether at 20%, 30% or 50% off—frankly they couldn't give them away and it struck me that all political careers don't just end in failure. They end in autobiographies too.
It baffles me why publishers continue to lay out large sums for books that nobody wants to read. Take The Blunkett Tapes: My Life in the Bear Pit (Bloomsbury, 2006). We may admire Blunkett for overcoming so many challenges in his life but his career ended in disgrace—and his book leapt immediately to the top of Private Eye's worst sellers chart. Menzies Campbell may have fared hardly better with his excitingly entitled My Autobiography (Hodder, 2008) which underwhelmed most of the critics.
"I see my life as one of experience and not of achievement," he wrote. "That it should interest others at all is a surprise." I couldn't have put it better myself. Politicians are superficially interesting while they have power over us. The moment they've gone, they have all the resonance of a Sudoku puzzle that's been filled in.
Of course, some of them can write. Roy Jenkins, David Owen and Denis Healey wrote engaging books. Boris Johnson, before someone castrated him for the Mayor of London race, had great style. And political memoirs can be successful as Alastair Campbell proved with The Blair Years (Random, 2007), even if it was published with the odd boast that he had deliberately left out everything we really wanted to read.
But right now the Tories have a 16-point lead in the polls and it really looks as though New Labour could soon be over. And what do we have to look forward to in the years to come? The return of Cherie and Tony Blair, that's what. Cherie has signed a £1m deal with Little, Brown but more sickening still is the alleged £6m Tony is getting from Random House. Is there anyone who wants to go back over the rights and wrongs of Iraq, the weapons of mass destruction, the Hutton Report, the lies, the spin? Is there anyone who thinks Tony will offer us any more than endless self-justification? Do this gruesome twosome deserve such huge financial rewards after what they've put us through?
One day, I'm sure, their books will turn up on the discount pile. But—really—it still isn't punishment enough.
Comments on this article
By Whitelaw Willie
Publishers buy them for many reasons; pride - having an ex-PM on the books impresses many, and not just other politicians; avarice - surely some day there will be another Alan Clark (nb it won't be Lembit Opik); and of course stupidity, which must be the only excuse for paying so much for Blunkett's work. Unless Bloomsbury were able to use it as a tax write-off, to enable them to keep more of their Harry Potter money.18 Apr 08 18:11
By June Austin
They do this for the same reason why the publish books by so-called celebrities - (is there a difference I ask myself?) because they have the short sightedness to think that someone may find it interesting.19 Apr 08 11:31
By David R N Livesley - Woodstock Vermont
Serialisation rights......Anthony you of all folks should be aware of this. I agree that not many work and and Harper Collins pulped a forest load of Mrs Thatchers tome.....but all in all it boosts the publishing houses ego as well as the editor who gets to commission them. Wouldn't you like to spend $$$$$$$$$$'s of someone elses money and get a chance at a new revelation of political scandal? What is sadder is that your public servants seem to all keep diaries and expect to publish them! Personally I'd like to read about Dennis Skinner who is a real politician. Or of course the amazing legend that is Tony Benn! Now who's going to commission Ken to reveal all when Boris (oops Mr Johnson...) defeats him? Come visit us in the US and see what real commercial pap is about when it comes to politics. The media here can't get enough of it!20 Apr 08 03:13
By Paul S
Very well said, Anthony. I wrote a similar column a few months back, but it was spiked by those to whom I must answer. Surely another reason why so many commercial disasters are commissioned is because they form very high level back-scratching between politicos and the publishers concerned. And before we are overcome with nausea from the Blair pair, we have to suffer the outpourings of their "deputy PM". I suppose it is fitting that he tops a tawdry life with a tawdry attempt at pushing his tome with releasing the bulimia story now. And they say we get the politicians we deserve.21 Apr 08 12:41
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