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England: Seven Myths That Changed a Country and How to Set Them Straight

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

England: Seven Myths That Changed a Country and How to Set Them Straight

Contributors:

By (Author) Tom Baldwin
By (author) Marc Stears

ISBN:

9781526646248

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Publication Date:

29th July 2025

UK Publication Date:

27th March 2025

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Social and cultural history
Elections and referenda / suffrage

Dewey:

320.942

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

368

Dimensions:

Width 128mm, Height 196mm, Spine 24mm

Weight:

247g

Description

A PROSPECT BOOK OF THE YEAR

Challenging, forensic, compelling'
SATHNAM SANGHERA
Pure centrist erotica. A myth-busting chronicle of bad-tempered, Brexit-riven England'
SUNDAY TIMES
Wonderfully evocative. Too honest, too nuanced and too deep for any party manifesto' MATTHEW PARRIS

After an election where people voted for a politics that our new Prime Minister describes as 'treading more lightly on peoples lives', this must-read book charts a gentler course for a country that has suffered the ructions of profound change in recent decades.

Some politicians will still talk of restoring an English birthright of liberty and the swashbuckling self-confidence to rule the waves. Others yearn for the old-fashioned morality which they claim once civilised a savage world or want to look inwards to a story of an enchanted island that can stand alone and isolated against the world.

But England, by Tom Baldwin, the bestselling biographer of Keir Starmer, and Marc Stears, an influential think tank head, unravels the myths that have distorted ideas of this country and provided ammunition for culture warriors from both left and right.

Instead of vainly promising to solve everything all at once, Baldwin and Stears provide clues for how a humbler, less grandiose, set of ideas rooted in real lives can help fix some of the things that have gone so badly wrong in recent years.

They travel from muddy fields in the Home Counties to the ports of Plymouth and Hull. They visit the old industrial heartland of Wolverhampton, spend weekends in the worn-down seaside resort of Blackpool, then gaze up the gleaming towers of modernity on the edge of London and the dreaming spires of Oxford. Along the way, they speak with many different people who tell stories of England, including politicians Nigel Farage and David Lammy, campaigner Chrisann Jarrett, playwright James Graham and scientist Sarah Gilbert.

What emerges is a startlingly fresh and vivid picture of an old country that belongs to everyone, or at least, to no one in particular.

Reviews

Pure centrist erotica. This myth-busting chronicle of bad-tempered, Brexit-riven England aims to provide Keir Starmer with the grand narrative he needs -- Will Lloyd * Sunday Times *
The book is cast as a travelogue, from Runnymede to Surrey, site of the signing of the Magna Carta and from where the idea that the English invented liberty is examined, to the seafaring buccaneers of Plymouth, working-class Blackpool and supposedly anti-immigrant Wolverhampton, to the cosy establishment elite of Oxford . . . Enjoyable . . . Compelling * Financial Times *
Challenging, forensic, compelling -- Sathnam Sanghera, author of 'Empireland'
England, with great insight, humour and compassion, punctures the shared myths and simplistic narratives of a complex country and its ever-surprising people. It entertainingly trawls through our long past in order to imagine a more hopeful future. And with a cast of characters to die for. A deeply human, unpretentious and evocative new look at an old country -- James Graham, playwright, 'Dear England'
A concerted act of myth-busting - about Magna Carta, about immigration and more - that seeks to build something better from the wreckage -- Peter Hoskin * Prospect, Books of the Year *
This iconoclastic masterpiece is well argued and beautifully written. A thoroughly entertaining read -- Alan Johnson, author of 'This Boy'
Wonderfully evocative descriptions of English places, English identities and the myths that cling to them. Too honest, too nuanced and too deep for any party manifesto -- Matthew Parris
A fascinating journey exploration of England and the English. Stears and Baldwin have thought deeply about who we were, who we are, and where we are going. Filled with colourful places and eccentric people, their tale of England told through a tour of its towns and cities gives a fresh perspective on the culture and history of a much-misunderstood nation. Essential reading for anyone wanting to understand the deep currents which have shaped England today, both what divides us and what we share -- Robert Ford, author of 'Brexitland'
A beautiful and detailed parsing of the eccentricities and contradictions at the heart of English identity -- Josie Rourke, theatre and film director

Author Bio

Tom Baldwin is a political writer who worked in Westminster and Washington for The Times before becoming director of communications for the Labour Party. He is the author of several books and is the biographer of Keir Starmer.

Marc Stears is the inaugural Director of the UCL Policy Lab. He was previously Director of the Sydney Policy Lab, a Professor of Political Theory at the University of Oxford and chief speechwriter to the Labour Party.

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