The Five Giants :A Biography of the Welfare State

4.14 ( 170 Ratings by Goodreads)
The Five Giants

The Five Giants :A Biography of the Welfare State

4.14 (170 Ratings by Goodreads)
paperback
Published: 16 July, 2001
Standard worldwide delivery by Wed, July 15 - Mon, July 20
Order within 0
Condition: NEW
$20.55
RRP $21.36
You save $0.80 (4%)
Price includes shipping
Available 1 in stock
- +
FREE Returns within 30 days

Description

An accessible and entertaining narrative history of the establishment, development and unravelling of the British Welfare State – now fully revised to cover Blair’s first term. Lively writing in the style of Peter Hennessy.

‘Giant Want. Giant Disease. Giant Ignorance. Giant Squalor. And the insidious Giant Idleness, “which destroys wealth and corrupts men”. These were evils to be vanquished by the postwar reconstruction of Britain. Timmins’ book recaptures brilliantly the high hopes of the period in which the Welfare State began to be created, and conveys the cranky zeal of its inventor, William Beveridge. The onslaught on the five Giants was the work of five gargantuan programmes that made up the core of Beveridge’s Welfare State. These were social security, health, education, housing and a policy of full employment. It is notoriously difficult to write about such subjects and keep the reader reading, but Timmins performs wonders of narrative clarity, anecdote and human detail in a book that finds its chosen level somewhere between Gibbon’s ‘Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire’ and ‘1066 and All That’…There is something very moving about his rhetoric of transformation and ‘The Five Giants’ will stir up strong emotions. It is impossible not to respond in personal terms to a book that is a part of so many of our histories, woven into the day-to-day texture of our lives.’ Fiona MacCarthy, Observer

Beveridge was originally only supposed to sort out the web of insurance services stifling Britain. ‘The Five Giants’ recounts how his original vision and campaign blossomed enormously to inspire a country at war with the hope that the peace might bring comfort and security for all. The tale hums with the energies and passions of activists, dreamers and ordinary Britons, and seethes with personal vendettas, forced compromises, arguments about money, awkward contradictions, noisy rows and fervent perseverance. Nicholas Timmins, who has seen how the Welfare State works every day for the last two decades, assesses the key personalities, the key problems, the key victories and key defeats in his anecdotal, witty and illuminating study of the Welfare State from the 1940s to the present day.

See more

More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780007102648
ISBN10 000710264X
Number Of Pages 720
Item Weight 456 g
Product Dimensions 129 x 198 x 34 mm
Publisher / Reseller HarperCollins Publishers
Format paperback
Edition Revised edition
See More +

Media Reviews

‘A splendid book – knowledgeable, readable and fair.’ Sunday Telegraph

‘A tour de force – thoroughly researched and vividly written…a masterpiece.’ Sunday Times

‘Extraordinarily comprehensive without ever being incomprehensible.’ Roy Hattersley, Independent

Show more

GoodReads Reviews

Author's Bio

Nicholas Timmins has been Public Policy Editor of the Financial Times since 1996. Before that he was with the Independent for a decade from its foundation., working variously as its health and social services correspondent , politcal correspondent and its public policy editor. He previously held similar posts at The Times. He has also worked for the Press Association and Nature. He has therefore been reporting on the events covered in this, his first book, for twenty years.

Show more