Fridays with Jim: Conversations about our country with Jim Bolger
By (Author) David Cohen
Massey University Press
Massey University Press
13th August 2020
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Politics and government
Political leaders and leadership
993.03092
Hardback
288
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 20mm
400g
A FORMER NEW ZEALAND PRIME MINISTER CANDIDLY REVIEWS HIS LIFE AND THE STATE OF THE NATION. A self-taught son of Irish immigrants, devout Catholic, rough-hewn King Country farmer and farming lobbyist, Jim Bolger entered New Zealand political life in the 1970s. He was a flinty Minister of Labour under Robert Muldoon and Prime Minister from 1990 to 1997. As ambassador to Washington, he helped create warmer relations with the United States. In recent years, he has chaired boards, served as the chancellor of the University of Waikato and marked more than a half-century of marriage to Joan, with whom he has nine children. Never given to orthodoxies, yet staunchly National in his politics, in his stillenergetic eighties he remains an impressively brisk progressive thinker. For six months he regularly sat down on Fridays with the writer David Cohen to reflect on his life and times, our nation and world. Fridays with Jim reveals a quintessential man of the old New Zealand who is fully in synch with the new New Zealand, and with plenty of ideas about where its all heading.
In exploring the life and times of Bolger through his conversations over the best part of a year, Cohenranges widely. Besides its political content, and its reflections on leadership, his fine book journeysinto Bolgers past, hisfamily origins in Ireland, the strength he drew from his upbringing in Taranaki,and his fervent Catholicism. This, together with the extended speeches he delivered in places asfar apart as Mumbai and Georgetown University in Washington, gives the book realdepth. Ian Templeton,Newsroom.
Wellington journalist David Cohen is the author of five books, and has written for overseas mastheads the Spectator, the Financial Times, the Guardian and the New York Times and, in New Zealand, Metro and NBR.