The Life and Death of Harold Holt
By (Author) Tom Frame
Allen & Unwin
Allen & Unwin
1st August 2005
Australia
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
321.02
Paperback
408
Width 152mm, Height 230mm
518g
When Harold Holt disappeared while swimming off Victoria's Cheviot Beach just before Christmas 1967, Australia was given one of its great and enduring mysteries. The death of Australia's seventeenth prime minister has remained part of popular imagination ever since.
Harold Holt's death had both immediate and long-term consequences for the Australian nation. Not only did it lose a prime minister active in the rejuvenation of its social life and domestic policy, it also lost a key advocate for Australia's involvement in the Vietnam War. His disappearance created a power vacuum in conservative politics and crippled Australian foreign policy.
However, behind the continuing and often macabre interest in Holt's death lies the fascinating story of a once lonely young man who set his sights on becoming prime minister while still at university. The self-made Holt never deviated from this ambition, working hard to acquire an aura of privilege and success.
The Life and Death of Harold Holt is the first full-length biography of one of Australia's most enigmatic prime ministers. It presents a detailed and searching profile of a man who longed for power but found ultimately that its exercise demanded more of him than he was able to give.
Dr Tom Frame is the Anglican Bishop to the Australian Defence Force and a respected historian. He has written seventeen books, including a best-selling account of the mysterious loss of the cruiser HMAS Sydney in 1941. His most recent book for Allen and Unwin is The Cruel Legacy: the tragedy of HMAS Voyager. He lives in Canberra with his wife Helen and their two teenage daughters.