New
book about Nicola Sturgeon and the Scottish Parliament
Surprisingly, this
is only the second biography of Nicola Sturgeon ever published. The last one
came out in 2015, and so has been overtaken by events. More importantly, this
book is founded almost exclusively on what the First Minister said in
parliament. It is not a collection of media stories, nor a bloodless academic
“assessment”. It is the unarguable truth of what the First Minster thought when
she was a junior MSP – sometimes funny, sometimes shocking, sometimes hopeful,
but always interesting, accurate and fully referenced. Later volumes will cover
her later career in parliament.
This book is also interesting
an example of a new genre – the citizen’s biography. That in itself is original. It represents a
move away from the traditional focus on “opinion formers” to actual, real-life
opinion holders—that is you and me. The new approach makes the reader part
of a horizontal conversation, rather than the vertical one we are
accustomed to – being told what to think by politicians, journalists or others
with an axe to grind, a policy to sell or another brain to wash. This book
presents Nicola Sturgeon as she presented herself to parliament. There can be
no arguing with that. YOU are in charge of the interpretation.
Ian Mitchell’s Nicola Sturgeon,
published last Tuesday, provides a meticulously referenced account of one
woman’s performance in the new Scottish parliament. It is also a history of
that parliament. It offers the best possible introduction to the “top table”
realities of political life in devolved Scotland. It will be essential reading
for anyone concerned by the direction Scottish politics is taking today. It is
likely to become the standard work on this woman, this parliament and this
period.
Scotland’s leading
constitutional authority, Alan Page, Emeritus Professor of Public Law,
University of Dundee and author of Constitutional Law of Scotland, has
commented:
“This is a
citizen’s biography not just of the current First Minister but also of the
Parliament of which she has been a member since it was first elected in 1999. While
some of the language and ideas may be new and unfamiliar, Ian Mitchell’s
biography deserves reading by all those who care about Scotland’s political and
constitutional future.”
Perfect reading for
the holidays, if you want to step back from events a bit and give some thought
to the wider dilemmas that the whole of Great Britain faces in the near future.
You can order
through Amazon here: Nicola Sturgeon, vol. 1 - The Years of
Ascent, 1970-2007: A Citizen's Biography of a Driven Woman in a Drifting
Parliament
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