Paul Keating bookcover

Paul Keating

The Big-Picture Leader
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Description

Paul Keating: the big-picture leader is the definitive biography of Australia's 24th prime minister, and the first that Keating has cooperated with in more than two decades.

Drawing on around 15 hours of new interviews with Keating, coupled with access to his extensive personal files, this book tells the story of a political warrior's rise to power, from the outer suburbs of Sydney through Young Labor and into parliament at just 25 years of age; serving as a minister in the last days of the Whitlam government; his path-breaking term as treasurer in the 1980s; his four-year prime ministership from 1991 to 1996; and his passions and interests since.

Bramston has interviewed more than 100 people who know and worked with Keating, including his family, parliamentary colleagues, advisers, party officials, union leaders, public servants, journalists and former prime ministers. Bramston secured access to Labor Party archives, documents debates in oncesecret cabinet papers, reveals caucus minutes for the first time, draws on unpublished diaries, discloses meeting records with US presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, talks to former British prime minister Tony Blair, and shares his discoveries from the personal files of Gough Whitlam, Bill Hayden, Bob Hawke, and John Howard.

Paul Keating saw political leadership as the combination of courage and imagination, a belief that powered his public career and helps explain his extraordinary triumphs and crushing lows. Keating blazed a trail of reform with a vision for Australia's future that still attracts ardent admirers and the staunchest critics. This book chronicles, analyses, and interprets Keating's life, and draws lessons for a Labor Party and a country still reluctant to fully embrace his legacy.

Product Details

PublisherScribe Us
Publish DateApril 24, 2018
Pages784
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781947534186
Dimensions9.2 X 6.1 X 2.0 inches | 2.0 pounds

About the Author

Troy Bramston is a senior writer and columnist with The Australian newspaper. He was previously a columnist with The Sunday Telegraph.

He is the bestselling author or editor of eleven books, including Bob Hawke: demons and destiny (2022), Robert Menzies: the art of politics (2019), and Paul Keating: the big-picture leader (2016). Troy co-authored The Truth of the Palace Letters (2020) and The Dismissal (2015) with Paul Kelly. He is currently writing a biography of Gough Whitlam.

Troy's biography of Bob Hawke was shortlisted for the Australian Political Book of the Year Award. He was the co-winner of the Australian Book Industry Award for The Dismissal. His biography of Paul Keating was a finalist for the Walkley Award, shortlisted for the National Biography Award, and longlisted for the Australian Book Industry Award. He was awarded the Centenary Medal for services towards the centenary of federation commemorations in 2001.

He lives in Sydney with his wife, Nicky, and two children, Madison and Angus.

Reviews

"Indispensable as an insight into Paul Keating's remarkable life and achievements, Bramston has interviewed everyone, produced fresh revelations and told a gripping story."
--Paul Kelly

"Troy Bramston's sweeping new biography of the former Prime Minister and Treasurer, Paul Keating: the big picture leader, captures the essence of the young man from Bankstown who rose to be Australia's most driven reforming policymaker. In crafting this authoritative biography, Bramston again cements his reputation as a first class Australian political historian. This book is definitive."
--Stephen Loosley, The Spectator Australia

"Warm [and] massively researched...This consistently compelling biography demonstrates Paul Keating was a leader like no one else."
--Peter Craven, The Age

"[Bramston's] achievement is to provide a fresh account of Keating's career...The result is a work that renders homage to Keating and to his ideas about leadership, power, and the nation."
--James Curran, Weekend Australian

"[A] welcome contribution that utilises recent history and a biographical frame to consider the meaning of leadership."
--Daily Review

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