Product Details
A Parliamentary Affair

A Parliamentary Affair
By Edwina Currie

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Product Description

Elaine Stalker, newly elected MP, has worked hard for her election to Westminster. But the unequivocally masculine atmosphere of the House of Commons is a hostile environment for an attractive, ambitious woman and Elaine is disappointed when her talents are ignored. Relishing his powerful role as wheeler-dealer, whip Roger Dickson provides a sympathetic ear for Elaine's frustrations. At first their relationship is strictly professional; but a passion for politics provides an aphrodisiac and late-night sittings offer ample opportunities for discussions of a more private nature. A No. 1 hardcover bestseller on its first appearance, Edwina Currie's A PARLIAMENTARY AFFAIR has gained a compulsive piquancy in the light of her Diaries' publication.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #643334 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-11-07
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 768 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
'Through it all runs the excitement of lived experience.a fresh and absorbing portrait of the parliamentary world' SUNDAY TELEGRAPH 'An absorbing tale of obsessive ambitions amongst the political classes with credible characters.you will not readily put this book down' DAVID MELLOR, SUNDAY EXPRESS 'A riveting insight into the malice, friendship, backbiting, infighting, political intrigue and seduction that goes on at the House of Commons' DAILY MAIL 'Leave you wondering how much could, or indeed has, happened' - THE SUN

About the Author
Edwina Currie is a former Government minister and for fourteen years was the well-known Member of Parliament for Derbyshire South. She is now a successful broadcaster (BBC Radio 5's Late Night Currie) and novelist.


Customer Reviews

Ambition and lust in the Corridors of Power3
Well, it's certainly value for money - the paperback is the size of a house brick - but it's a bit cumbersome for reading in bed. We follow the adventures of a quartet of Tory MPs, two newly elected, two old hands. They form liaisons with each other, with journalists, with rather iffy strangers, some hetero, some homo. I'm not going to give it away by saying who does what with whom. If that is all there was to it, it would be a pretty routine bonkbuster. Two features set the book apart - the Parliamentary background and the insight into the politicians' mind. The small details of parliamentary daily life give the book interest and some authority. Other people's workplaces are interesting. If you read Magnus Mills' Restraint of Beasts you will learn a lot about the life of a fencing contractor. Mrs Currie's detail about who drinks where, about the Table Office, the appearance of Ministerial offices and so on are fascinating to anyone who is interested in politics. Her characters suffer from all being Tories - there is a one-dimensional quality to them. Money is no problem; children are cared for by au pairs and packed off to tinpot snobschools as soon as possible. Even her characters' names show class bias - the Tories all have mellifluous three-syllable names ( apart from our heroine and her family who are clearly arriviste) - the few working class characters have short sharp names - no poetry there. And whilst we are thinking about names, the whole plot of the book is summed up by the name of the chief male - Roger Dickson ( not even Dixon) Just feel the Freudianism in that ! The book is called 'A Parliamentary Affair' and it focuses upon the impact of several such. But only upon the parliamentary careers of the protagonists. Nobody, at any level, gives a damn about the impact of infidelity on wives, husbands, families, children. All come across as totally self-centred, self-obsessed, self-absorbed. And the last thing any of them seems to consider, ever, is the well-being of the electors who sent them there. The most sympathetic character in the book is our heroine's teenage daughter who is treated appallingly badly by everybody yet ends up canvassing for her mother's re-election. I know that I am not supposed to but I warm to the anti-hero, the tabloid journalist whose mission is to expose Parliamentary antics - I found his comeuppance unconvincing.In a democracy, he is just as necessary as the MPs. I think that Edwina Currie set out with the intention of writing a book on the difficulties of being a woman MP. If that was her intention, then she has failed - what we have been given is 'Bitch on the Make'. It's a good read, but don't bother voting for this bunch of egomaniacs at the next election!

"well, who'd have thought it!"5
This is a novel about the emotional fallout from living life in the public eye; if you're looking for ruthless ambition and backstabbing, look elsewhere. Neither is this an accomplished bonkbuster; readers of erotic fiction will find the sex scenes rather demure, and be startled by the daughter's miserable downfall. the parliamentary innuendos and the excruciatingly realistic bye election are delicious, even though non-tories will sigh at her 1D portrayal of the 'opposition' characters.
On the other hand, i laughed alomost non-stop, and appreciated the explaination of that most unlikely of pairings. It also reminded me how fundamentally naive professional politicians are.
Oh, yes; eggs do feature!