Subscribe to The Spectator

Saturday 26 May 2012

Latest issue

Buy the current issue

Britain fights back against gloating Sarko with killer reading list

David Blackburn

Thursday, 15th December 2011

Britain fights back against gloating Sarko with killer reading list

It’s no state secret that Britain was outmanoeuvred by France at last week’s European Summit. The Old Foe triumphed and their political establishment has been, in the words of Monty Python’s The Holy Grail, farting in our general direction ever since. President Sarkozy has described David Cameron as an indignant child and the Parisian equivalent of Mervyn King has insisted that Britain’s credit rating be downgraded.

We British are renowned for our stoicism, but there are limits. The Foreign Office has rebuffed the garlic-infused petulance wafting across La Manche: literary Tory minister Keith Simpson has produced his customary holiday reading list and it contains a few putdowns for our Gallic cousins. Take, for instance, this section of Simpson’s witty and informative blurb:

‘It would be fair to say that Franco-British relations have had their ups and downs and at the time of writing there have been one or two little local difficulties. James Barr, who worked for Francis Maude ten years ago, has been fascinated with European rivalries in the Middle East. In 2007 he wrote Setting the Desert on Fire: T E Lawrence and Britain’s Secret War in Arabia 1916-18. Franco-British rivalry is the subject of his latest book A Line in the Sand Britain, France and the Struggle That Shaped the Middle East (£25) which is based upon French memoirs and archival sources. Both France and 
Britain were prepared to support and arm terrorist/independence movements in each other’s sphere of influence.

Peter Mangold, journalist and author, shows in his Britain and the Defeated French: From Occupation to Liberation, 1940-1944 (£18.99) the ambivalent British attitude both to the Vichy and Free French, and how those wartime relationships resonate today – something for President’s Sarkozy’s stocking?’

What fun. Simpson has compiled an enthralling list ; those whose present-buying has not gone according to plan should refer to it as a matter of urgency.  

Blog Tags: Christmas , France , Politics , Reading

Post this entry to:   del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit

Comments Post comment

David Tomlinson

December 15th, 2011 11:29pm Report this comment

James Barr's erudite and detailed account of French iniquities during the 1940s (the concluding chapters of A Line in the Sand), especially their support for the Stern Gang horrifies any of us who have some relationship to the subject (my father fought the French in the Syrian war in 1941 and I was a child in Palestine 1946-7).
Most typically French was the seemless transition politically from Vichy to Free French and back again. That was epitomised by the way that without a thought in the world they conspired to help kill the British in Palestine simply in order to supplant us.
I've worked in France as Chief Executive of a (small) French engineering company and I have a high regard for the ordinary French working person, both in social and technical qualities, but the patronat/enarchs are something else - never to be trusted.

Colin Cumner

December 16th, 2011 6:58am Report this comment

Having been a lover of all things French for many years, my Franocphilia began to unravel following the unlwaful and treacherous bombing of the 'Rainbow Warrior' in Auckland Harbour in the 1980s in which a photographer on board lost his life. When the French Government then lauded those responsible for this treacherous and lethal attack I finally began to see the French in a far less flattering light. No wonder Britain fought more wars against the French than anyone else.

Post comment

Back to top


...by: Jeremy Clarke

Classic Crews: A Harry Crews Reader

To find out more about Jeremy Clarke's singular reading habits, click here.

View More

Most recent Book Blog posts

Tag Cloud

Books Blog archive

Spectator recommends
Spectator classifieds

THE PRESENT FINDER

1,700 Unusual Christmas Presents Request Catalogue 01935 815 195 Quote SPEC10 for 10% discount www.presentfinder.co.uk

OLIVE BRANCH FLORISTS

Pimilco based Florist with online ordering Web: www.olivebranch.net Tel: 020 7630 1868 Fax: 020 7233 8844

RUFFS Bespoke Signet rings

62 Shore Road, Warsash, Southampton, SO31 9FT Telephone: 01489 578867 Web site: www.ruffs.co.uk