Reagan and Thatcher
The Difficult Relationship
29 March 2012
Territory Rights — Worldwide, excluding Canada, the British Commonwealth and the European Union.
Description
An iconic friendship, an uneasy alliance—a revisionist account of the couple who ended the Cold War.
Brilliantly reconstructing some of their most dramatic encounters, Aldous draws on recently declassified documents and extensive oral history to dismantle the popular conception of Reagan-Thatcher diplomacy. His startling conclusion—that the weakest link in the Atlantic Alliance of the 1980s was the association between the two principal actors—will mark an important contribution to our understanding of the twentieth century.
Reviews
"Starred review. This is excellent revisionist history, giving another slant to the interaction of two political icons on the world stage." — Publishers Weekly
"An interesting revisionist history, Aldous’ study should attract the foreign policy audience." — Gilbert Taylor, Booklist
"Vivid, fast-paced and immensely readable, Richard Aldous' new book challenges conventional wisdom and prods us to rethink the 1980s." — Prof. David Reynolds (Cambridge), author of America, Empire of Liberty
"An important study, based on a wealth of recently-released documents, which puts the Thatcher-Reagan friendship in a wholy new (and more somber) light. It should be essential reading for anyone who cares about the history, the health and the future of the Anglo-American 'special relationship'." — David Cannadine, author of The Decline and Fall of the British Aristocracy and Mellon: An American Life
"I can’t speak for President Reagan, but I’ve been both praised and pulverized by Margaret Thatcher and Richard Aldous seems to me to have captured the force of her personality. She did have an emotional understanding of Reagan and her of her that in its essence, in my judgement, was warmer than between Churchill and Roosevelt. But her fury was incandescent over the invasion of Grenada, a member of the Commonwealth, as was the wimpiness of the initial American reaction to the seizure of the Falkland Islands. This is a valuable look behind the looking glass of public-relations politics of the special relationship." — Harold Evans, author of The American Century