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Online pdf. Scarica pdf gratis Scarica PDF The Aachen Memorandum by Andrew Roberts (2012-06-19)- ebook bonus




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The Aachen Memorandum by Andrew Roberts (2012-06-19)

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  • Published on: 1610
  • Binding: Paperback

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Excellent satirical thriller
By Tabula Rasa
I am pretty much in favour of the EU, and probably have nothing in common with Andrew Roberts politically. But for me, this book is an out and out delight, with its wonderfully satirical take on a European Union taken to its furthest extremes of sinister bureaucracy. Massively entertaining and fast-paced with a sympathetic hero up against a dangerous foe, it has been a favourite for a long time, and a book I have reread a number of times.

0 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
5Entertaining, even to someone who is pro-EU!
By Jonathan Bishop
Even as someone in favour of EU integration I find this a good book. It is very anti-EU and to someone like myself who has a Masters in European Union law it is quite funny how absurd it is!The extreme portrayal of British people as being in a nightmarish anti-EU world where much of the country's traditions have been outlawed fits the mis-tellings of the reality by the UK media today, even though it was first published in 1995 before even the Treaty of Amsterdam was signed.The story is set in 2045, and has some unforeseen errors - Princess Diana was alive and aged 82 with a multi-millionaire husband at her side. Maybe the conspiracy theories were right!The main character is a young journalist for the Times who is framed for murder, and is being tracked down in order to prevent him revealing the truth about a conspiracy. With MPs being criticised for speaking out against the holocaust of Arabs in Palestine at present, the story around this journalist trying to get the truth out there is very apt for the time we find ourselves in.Totally implausibly he saves the British from this when William I comes to the UK from New Zealand. The security forces are trying to trace him down in order to silence him. He doesn't know who to trust, but eventually does find allies. The big event where he will have the opportunity to 'save' the nation is William V, of Great Britain, and William I of New Zealand, comes over for the first state visit since the Royal Family slipped away 20 odd years before.

9 of 22 people found the following review helpful.
1Uninspired anti-European melodrama
By A customer
Set in a dystopic vision of a "United States of Europe" in 2045, the plot has little Englander hero Horatio Lestoq setting out to topple the Brussels bureucracy, which is, incidentally, a thin shield for renewed German plans for domination (something new, please! ). Unfortunately, it all goes drearily wrong - and I am not talking about Lestoq's adventures here, but of the novel itself. The scenario of a Britain having lost its sovereignty to a Continental is painted much more effectively in SS-GB, Len Deighton's parahistorical novel. There, the oppressive athmosphere of the totalitarian regime rises from the pages of the novel to embrace the reader. The Aachen Memorandum, in comparison, is trite, wholly unconvincing, and, unfortunately, steeped in nationalist prejudice. The constant slurs on issues such as minority rights policies, devolution, and feminism, to name only a few, show this book to pander to the vested interests of Conservative Anglocentric Eurosceptics.The EU bureaucracy is not wothoput its problems. But a novel written in the style of an expanded Daily Mail column is not the critical tool with which to invest these.

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