I have just read this book several months after buying it.
It is an interesting, even fascinating read, although it suffers slightly from an over-familiar and at times almost careless prose-style. And there are the inevitable mistakes: I am sure that the Unionist ex-MP Ken Maginnis did not appreciate having his name spelled the same way as the Sinn Fein deputy first minister!
For me the over-riding points are:
On "Old Labour" versus "New Labour" - TB was concerned that Old Labour was unelectable as anything other than on a one-term protest vote and he was desperate to make it the natural party of government, previously the Tories' dubious conceit.
He is plainly sceptical, contemptuous even, of left wing politicians whose policies appear not in tune with an "aspiring" electorate". He is unconvincing, however, on what to do for the "unaspring" electorate.
It is good to see him standing up for the British MPs who were tarred unfairly en masse as corrupt by the expenses scandal.
It is plain that on foreign intervention, as he says, early spectacular successes in Kosovo and Sierra Leone encouraged the belief that similar policies would work elsewhere. For me, he is less than wholly convincing on the reasons for going to war in iraq, but I respect his reasons for doing so. But I did anyway, before the book. He also makes the important point that there were two conflicts in Iraq: the war to remove Saddam and the terrorist campaign led by iran and Al-Qaeda.
His criticisms of the press are wholly justified and ought to spark the debate he hopes for, but won't.
The best summary of this book I have seen is by Peter Stothard, who calls it the work of an extraordinary individual who in the end failed to convince the British people that he was an "ordinary bloke". But yet throughout the book one is struck by his awareness of the need to perform for the cameras. If the bo