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  • Published: 3 May 2007
  • ISBN: 9780141929316
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 768
Categories:

Having it So Good

Britain in the Fifties




The most celebrated history book of autumn 2006 comes with a massive publicity campaign.

Having It So Good evokes Britain emerging from the shadow of war and the privations of austerity and rationing into growing affluence. Peter Hennessy takes his readers into the front-rooms where the Coronation was watched on television, to the classrooms and now coffee bars of 1950s Britain – and also into the secret Cabinet rooms in which decisions about the British nuclear bomb were taken and plans made for the catastrophe of nuclear war. He brings to life the ageing Churchill, in his last faltering spell as Prime Minister, the highly-strung Anthony Eden taking his country to war in the teeth of American opposition and world opinion, and the rise of ‘Supermac’ Harold Macmillan, gliding over problems with his Edwardian insouciance. Above all, Having It So Good captures the smell and the flavour of an extraordinary decade in which affluence and anxiety combined to produce their own winds of change.

  • Published: 3 May 2007
  • ISBN: 9780141929316
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 768
Categories:

About the author

Peter Hennessy

Peter Hennessy reported Whitehall for ten years, mainly for The Times, The Economist and the Financial Times. He is Professor of Contemporary History, at the University of London, and is married with two daughters. His most recent book is The Prime Minister (2000).

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Praise for Having it So Good

Hennessy combines the balance and authority of a historian with the brilliantly selective eye of the investigative journalist ... if the Gods gossip this is how it would sound

Books of the Year

Philip Ziegler, Spectator