Between the Waves
The Hidden History of a Very British Revolution 1945-2016
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Narrated by:
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Eliot Chapman
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By:
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Tom McTague
About this listen
**Longlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction**
This is the definitive history of Britain’s tumultuous relationship with Europe – as it’s never been told before.
'Powerful, precise, morally engaged, wonderfully alert to character, context and the greater purpose of political life' – Rory Stewart, author of Politics on the Edge
'A lucid, thoughtful and richly provocative book' – Dominic Sandbrook, The Sunday Times
In a story of ambition and underhand politics, of nation, identity and belief, acclaimed political writer Tom McTague chronicles the battle of ideas, events and personalities that first took the country into the Common Market in 1973. Only to take it out of the European Union in an explosive referendum a little over forty years later.
Drawing on unpublished sources and exclusive interviews, McTague unearths the roots of ideological conflict that raged between the leading politicians of the twentieth century as they fought for the future of Europe – Charles de Gaulle, Harold Macmillan, Jean Monnet, Enoch Powell and Margaret Thatcher.
Alongside these famous figures are the lesser-known actors in Britain’s great post-war drama: a coterie of Eurosceptic student radicals, Cold Warriors, eccentric billionaires and political strategists who turned the tide of history.
A riveting story of the clashing ideals that have pulled at Britain’s public imagination for more than seven decades, Between the Waves raises that most elemental of questions: who are we?
'A sweeping, impressive and ambitious history of modern Europe' – Helen Lewis, author of Difficult Women
'Compelling, hugely well-informed . . . will stand for many years as the authoritative political history’ – David Kynaston, author of Austerity Britain, 1945-1951
Critic reviews
Somewhat tenuously, McTague anchors Britain’s journey to Brexit in North Africa during the Second World War, where Harold Macmillan, Charles de Gaulle, Jean Monnet, and Enoch Powell were all in theatre.
From there it’s a linear progression to GB’s perennial debates about being in or out of Europe, or semi-detached. The author is particularly good at tracking the succession of Eurosceptic intellectuals and their think tanks, as well as their business backers.
The account reminds us that English socialists as much as right-wing ideologues waxed and waned over Europe over the past eighty years.
McTague’s story is comprehensive and enlightening, and having got to know him on the excellent These Times podcast with Helen Thompson, it’s a pity he didn’t narrate the book himself.
Comprehensive and enlightening
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Fascinating account of Britain’s relationship with the EU
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Excellent coverage of UK in EU
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Fabulous
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Fascinating and utterly engrossing
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