Take a photo of a barcode or cover
A review by scribepub
Tiberius with a Telephone: The Life and Stories of William McMahon by Patrick Mullins
‘For God’s sake behave like a prime minister’, implored the journalist who had assisted William McMahon to attain that office. His faults were legion. Throughout his political career he boasted and intrigued, curried favour, and was habitually disloyal. He worked assiduously with little comprehension of his responsibilities, and was indecisive and prone to panic. Patrick Mullins’ engrossing, fine biography does much more than document all these liabilities: it explains how they enabled him to attain national leadership and left him unable to exercise it.
Stuart Macintyre
Mullins fills an enormous gap in our political history with extraordinary insight and clarity. He casts new light on our post-war politics. and rescues one of its most dominant figures from the throes of partisan caricature.
Lindsay Tanner, Author of Sideshow and Politics with Purpose
A welcome addition to prime ministerial biography … An engaging and informative read.
Troy Bramston, The Australian
This is the most detailed investigation and explanation of what happened … Completing a biography of this scope is an enormous undertaking, and Patrick Mullins does it with considerable skill … Mullins conveys the turmoil, the atmosphere of crisis, the bickering and the bloodletting that marked this extraordinary period of Australian political history.
David Solomon, Inside Story
Dr Mullins has become an expert on the topic.
Danielle Nohra, citynews.com.au
So why did Mullins, a young political historian, pen a 776-page biography of William McMahon? And why is this book about such an apparently unlikely and unlikeable subject already emerging as a classic of its genre, just weeks after release? To find out the reader should first go to the book. The pages are well written and authoritative. They add up to a precociously confident historian's distillation of material from a remarkable range of sources.
Australian Financial Review
[Patrick Mullins] has certainly engaged in wide-ranging and meticulous research on his subject.
Michael Sexton, The Australian
Tiberius with a Telephone is relentless in its quest to understand a man who seems out of his depth in Canberra and, at times, uncertain why he’s even there. Importantly, it shows when a government is bereft of real leadership and ideas, how quickly things can go wrong.
Jeff Maynard, Herald Sun
[Patrick Mullins] provides a detailed and, at times, sympathetic account of the difficult issues McMahon faced as he struggled to shape events. But he is brutal in his depiction of McMahon’s dishonesty, dithering, vanity, cunning and capacity for political self-harm … His biography is an engaging exposition of a neglected politician and his complex era.
Duncan Hughes, Sydney Morning Herald
This is, as others have remarked, biography at its best: diligently researched, with detail nowhere else examined, and a demonstration of fine judgement concerning the crucial interplay between personal disposition, role demands, and historical context.
James Walter, Australian Book Review
The book is a significant work – exhaustive and considered ... an engrossing read.
Nick Mattiske, Insights (Uniting Church in Australia)
A fascinating read.
John Atkin, Company Director
[An] extremely entertaining, intriguing biography.
Mark Thomas, The Canberra Times
Stuart Macintyre
Mullins fills an enormous gap in our political history with extraordinary insight and clarity. He casts new light on our post-war politics. and rescues one of its most dominant figures from the throes of partisan caricature.
Lindsay Tanner, Author of Sideshow and Politics with Purpose
A welcome addition to prime ministerial biography … An engaging and informative read.
Troy Bramston, The Australian
This is the most detailed investigation and explanation of what happened … Completing a biography of this scope is an enormous undertaking, and Patrick Mullins does it with considerable skill … Mullins conveys the turmoil, the atmosphere of crisis, the bickering and the bloodletting that marked this extraordinary period of Australian political history.
David Solomon, Inside Story
Dr Mullins has become an expert on the topic.
Danielle Nohra, citynews.com.au
So why did Mullins, a young political historian, pen a 776-page biography of William McMahon? And why is this book about such an apparently unlikely and unlikeable subject already emerging as a classic of its genre, just weeks after release? To find out the reader should first go to the book. The pages are well written and authoritative. They add up to a precociously confident historian's distillation of material from a remarkable range of sources.
Australian Financial Review
[Patrick Mullins] has certainly engaged in wide-ranging and meticulous research on his subject.
Michael Sexton, The Australian
Tiberius with a Telephone is relentless in its quest to understand a man who seems out of his depth in Canberra and, at times, uncertain why he’s even there. Importantly, it shows when a government is bereft of real leadership and ideas, how quickly things can go wrong.
Jeff Maynard, Herald Sun
[Patrick Mullins] provides a detailed and, at times, sympathetic account of the difficult issues McMahon faced as he struggled to shape events. But he is brutal in his depiction of McMahon’s dishonesty, dithering, vanity, cunning and capacity for political self-harm … His biography is an engaging exposition of a neglected politician and his complex era.
Duncan Hughes, Sydney Morning Herald
This is, as others have remarked, biography at its best: diligently researched, with detail nowhere else examined, and a demonstration of fine judgement concerning the crucial interplay between personal disposition, role demands, and historical context.
James Walter, Australian Book Review
The book is a significant work – exhaustive and considered ... an engrossing read.
Nick Mattiske, Insights (Uniting Church in Australia)
A fascinating read.
John Atkin, Company Director
[An] extremely entertaining, intriguing biography.
Mark Thomas, The Canberra Times