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Head of Zeus
What We Have Lost
04 Oct 2018 * EBOOK * £5.99 * 9781784972349

James Hamilton-Paterson turns his literary and analytical skills to the wider picture of Britain's lost industrial and technological civilisation.

Non Fiction / HBLW (Modern History)
Extent: 368 pages
Exclusive: GB AU NZ IN ZA SG   Not for sale: CA US
Blackbird
Trains, Planes, Ships and Cars
Marked for Death
Eroica
Also by James Hamilton-Paterson
What We Have Lost: The Dismantling of Great Britainby James Hamilton-Paterson

'Exquisitely written and ripe with detail' Sunday Times.
'An engaging book ... He knows his British stuff' The Times.
'One of England's most skilled and alluring prose writers in or out of fiction, has done something even more original' London Review of Books.

WHAT WE HAVE LOST IS A MISSILE AIMED AT THE
BRITISH ESTABLISHMENT, A BLISTERING INDICTMENT
OF POLITICIANS AND CIVIL SERVANTS, PLANNING
AUTHORITIES AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, WHO HAVE
PRESIDED, SINCE 1945, OVER THE DECLINE OF BRITAIN'S
INDUSTRIES AND REPLACED THE 'GREAT' IN BRITAIN WITH
A FOR SALE SIGN HUNG AROUND THE NECK OF THE NATION.

Between 1939 and 1945, Britain produced around 125,000 aircraft, and enormous numbers of ships, motor vehicles, armaments and textiles. We developed radar, antibiotics, the jet engine and the computer. Less than seventy years later, the major industries that had made Britain a global industrial power, and employed millions of people, were dead. Had they really been doomed, and if so, by what? Can our politicians have been so inept? Was it down to the superior competition of wily foreigners? Or were our rulers culturally too hostile to science and industry?

James Hamilton-Paterson, in this evocation of the industrial world we have lost, analyzes the factors that turned us so quickly from a nation of active producers to one of passive consumers and financial middlemen.

James Hamilton-Paterson is a novelist and non-fiction writer whose books defy easy categorisation. Gerontius won the Whitbread Prize; Cooking with Fernet Branca was longlisted for the Booker Prize. His acclaimed books on the oceans, including Seven-Tenths, have been widely translated, and his books about aviation have set new standards for writing about aircraft. Born and educated in England, Hamilton-Paterson has lived in the Philippines and Italy and now makes his home in Austria.

Explains how the loss of industry and transformation of Britain into a banker's paradise has fuelled Brexit.

An acerbic, entertaining book about British decline.

A ferocious indictment of the ways in which successive governments have stymied, shut down or sold off our manufacturing capacity.

MARKET: David Kynaston; Dominic Sandbrook; Peter Hennessy.


'A book that is by turns engrossing and infuriating – a response to Brexit in mechanical form' Evening Standard

'A book about that moment between the end of the Second World War and Suez, when there was early nuclear power, the first computers, jet engines, fast fighter planes and big ships – all made here. Now Britain imports more than it exports. What went wrong?' i Newspaper

'He writes beautifully' Literary Review

'Exquisitely written and ripe with detail, [James Hamilton-Paterson] explores one disaster story after another' Sunday Times

'Engaging book ... He knows his British stuff' The Times

'Hamilton-Paterson, still one of England's most skilled and alluring prose writers in or out of fiction, has done something even more original. With imaginative scenes enacting 'what we have lost', he combines closely researched and detailed accounts of the decay of one legendary British product after another. Cars, motorbikes, shipbuilding and the nuclear industry are all there' London Review of Books

'Definitely a book for those questioning how Great Britain lost its greatness ... Written lyrically enough to interest the general reader' Guardian

'Chapters on cars, ships and motorbikes tell a melancholy story, though Hamilton-Paterson, also a distinguished novelist, can't resist glints of dark humour' Daily Mail

'James Hamilton-Paterson mourns our nation's industrial decline in a deeply personal polemic' International Express

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