Afbeelding van de auteur.

Claire BerlinskiBesprekingen

Auteur van Loose Lips

9+ Werken 390 Leden 11 Besprekingen

Besprekingen

Toon 11 van 11
Was looking for a fair, unbiased look at the Iron Lady's legacy. What I found instead was a academic excuse of a love letter for Thatcher, complete with the infamous scene of Berlinski smelling the handbag as well as constantly making excuses for failed policies during Thatcher's era and trying to make it sound like London was ~saved~ by her policies; there is also the characterization of Labour men who disliked Thatcher as men with mommy issues. It was shallow and clunkily written and I regret starting it in the first place.
 
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sarahlh | 4 andere besprekingen | Mar 6, 2021 |
Eminently readable, well organized around principal issues of her 11-year administration. Unusual technique of extensively quoting interview and archival material works surprisingly well. A balanced but fundamentally syampathetic portrait of the Iron Lady.
 
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jacoombs | 4 andere besprekingen | Apr 12, 2013 |
Claire Berlinski is a very pretty (considering the serious subject matter, there is disconcertingly sexy photo of her on the back cover) American Jew who has lived and traveled in Europe, and has some tales to tell of her time there concerning immigrant Muslims and Europe's inability to assimilate them. One big chunk of the book is about her intimate knowledge of the people who were fictionalized in a very popular English book called "White Teeth," by a Jamaican (?) girl about minorities living and loving in Britain. Claire and the Jamaican girl were the real-life lovers of the fictionalized Pakistani brothers in that book, Claire quotes her ex-boyfriend extensively for this book, trying to get to the reasons for his hate given that he is a relatively successful and affluent Pakstani Briton.
Another big chunk of the book is devoted to the German rock band Rammstein, from which she implies that that old German mindset is readying itself to explode across Europe again.
I had been hoping to get a book to generally explain the various governments in modern Europe, but so far have been unable to find anything - this was the closest thing. I did learn one surprising thing - in France there is a governmental policy called "republicanism" which forbids the counting of people based on race.
And it was odd that though this was written in 2004, she gets into the Muslim problem in southwestern France, the area around Toulouse, which has been in the news just recently with the murder of seven by a Muslim there.
My search for a decent general description of modern European governments continues. All of the LThing recommendations for this book focus more on Muslims than on Europe.½
 
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br77rino | 1 andere bespreking | Apr 5, 2012 |
I ws completely absorbed by this novel which is a lightly disguised account of what it is like to join the CIA and go through their rigourous training system. As a non US citizen I read some of the views (not, I feel sure, those of the author's) about the success of their covert operations like many in the UK with an up-raised eyebrow and an amount of sceptiscim. When I was a child in central Africa, everyone knew who the local CIA agent was, even though he (accompanied by his wife) he was posing as an architect. They stood out like a sore thumb! And the wife gave my mum a brilliant recipe for Curried Chicken and Apple Soup which I often serve !
Actually this book made me really think about the morality of espionage, what it does it do to the spy?, do you get the information you REALLY need, what IS truth?
Pease will Claire Berlinski write a sequel soon!½
 
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herschelian | 1 andere bespreking | Feb 3, 2011 |
The subtitle is "Why Margaret Thatcher Matters," and that question is addressed very ably in this insightful and engaging retrospective. It is written in a conversational, journalistic style, yet is sound and well-referenced.
 
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zcoot | 4 andere besprekingen | Oct 27, 2010 |
Ms. Berlinksi is obviously a fan of Lady Thatcher. That said, she goes to great links to reprint the views of those who dislike the Lady. As an American who knew little of Lady Thatcher outside of her reputation, the book was a great introduction to her. The book spends equal amounts of time discussing not only the historical account of what happened in Lady Thatcher's political life, but how that fit into larger questions of abstract political philosophy and practical politics. All in all a good read, with very interesting connotations for current political events.
 
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bohannon | 4 andere besprekingen | Jun 28, 2010 |
Funniest book I've read in a long time--the author sets up her characters one by one, then stages a dinner party to end all dinner parties. Should not be missed.
 
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shalewagner | 1 andere bespreking | Apr 4, 2008 |
The unappealing title almost put me off, but I am glad it didn't as this was a surpisingly good read. Protaganist shares the author's name and has also written a spy novel called "Loose Lips". Living in Paris, working on a novel, she becomes obsessed with her email relationship with an Iranian archaelogist. Or is he? She swaps arpartments with a friend of his in Istanbul. Here is where the author's pen shines - her descriptions of Istanbul are full of signs and sounds and smells and you feel the full force of the wonder and confusion of this city full of ethnicities and history. The story of her relationship with Arsalan is almost a side issue and the ending is a bit flat but oddly realistic.½
 
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triscuit | 1 andere bespreking | Nov 12, 2007 |
Summary on the back reads like this will be a juicy, entertaining novel, but the book fails to deilver anything, no conclusion to the questions & situations that occur!½
 
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MsBeautiful | 1 andere bespreking | Aug 24, 2006 |
For Dr. Feulner, With gratitude for a memorable day
 
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efeulner | 4 andere besprekingen | May 2, 2014 |
Toon 11 van 11