Member Reviews

The Welfare State. How it shaped post-war Britain, how it coloured the lives of those who grew up in it. And how we need to save it.

Absolutely compelling

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I am always interested in book about social history and appreciated this one.
The style of writing is pleasant and it makes you understand what the welfare in the 70s.
It's a well researched and interesting book and even if I do not always agree with the writer's idea it's a book that gives a lot of food for thought.
Recommended.
Many thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this ARC, all opinions are mine.

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As Stuart Maconie admits early on, nobody who is not already at least partly convinced of the importance of the public sector is going to be converted by this book. Even more politically motivated than his last book, Long Road from Jarrow, this is an engaging and entertaining account of the history and current position of the 'nanny state' in the UK. Covering vital areas such as education, libraries, health, transport with wit, generosity and real concern for the future, he is very effective at capturing the increased mean-spiritedness and atomisation that has characterised the last 40 years or so in the UK in general and the last 10 in England in particular. You would have to be very hard-hearted or blinkered to believe that we not lost an awful lot as a result.

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I thought The Nanny State Made Me was excellent. Stuart Maconie is a very good, engaging writer who combines thorough research, intelligence and genuine interest in people with a readable style and just the right leavening of wit and humour to lighten the subject without ever trivialising it.

The book is self-confessedly polemical; Maconie writes passionately about the public services which helped him throughout his life and which so many of us rely on but often take for granted. He uses aspects of his own life to link subjects the NHS, council housing, public parks, libraries, schools, transport, the benefits system and so on. He comes from a left-wing stance, but is never doctrinaire. He recognises some of the failings of the left and supports his arguments with facts, statistics and human stories, plus his own visits to important people and places which illustrate his points and show pretty conclusively how much we all need these state-organised institutions. His conclusions can be largely summed up in his own words: “We may be coming to realise that the people who complain about the nanny state are the people who had nannies.”

It’s a delight to read. The following passage about a personal experience of the NHS gives a good flavour of the style:
“It was quiet and tense in the room where I sat as a young doctor, Malaysian/ English I think, was telling me and my stepdaughter that my gravely ill ninety-year-old mother-in-law would probably not last the afternoon. However, he said, there was one slim chance of keeping her with us a while longer. It was tricky and risky and would involve him inserting a thin wire in a vein in her arm and trying to manually guide it up and into her torso via a maze of arteries and eventually to her heart where, with luck and skill, it would remove the blockage there. He made it sound a little like the fairground game where a steady hand around the curves of a steel pipe is needed to avoid setting the electric buzzer off. Except the price of failure was rather more serious than a mild jolt, of course. We told him to try, and away he went.
“Forty-five minutes later, he returned, rolling his sleeves down and mopping his brow. ‘Well, it worked,’ he said, breezy and matter-of-fact. ‘She’s weak and very poorly but she’s still here. You can go up for a chat in a minute. I have to go now.’ With that, and the tired but satisfied air of a mechanic who had just replaced a fan belt, he strode away to perform another minor miracle. I thought then, as I do every time I recall that morning, that in those forty-five minutes that young man achieved more, did something more important, than anything and everything I will do in my whole life. Yours too, probably, if you’ll forgive me. When I think about the NHS, I think about him, and then I think about those people not fit to scrub his hands who make his job and his life – and the jobs and lives of his tired, overworked, dedicated, brilliant workmates – harder every day. And I know whose side I am on, and who my enemy is.”

The Nanny State Made Me is thought-provoking, touching, amusing, informative and a pleasure to read. Very, very warmly recommended.

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Many thanks to the author, publisher and Netgalley for a free ARC of this ebook. What a great read! Maconie is a very well known and respected broadcaster. He also writes in a engaging and informative way. In this book he explores the past political movements which have given Britain the substance and survivability that I so hope it still has today. Some will find this an uncomfortable read, it will depend on your personal beliefs and what you uphold as being a caring society. I highly recommend this book.

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Nostalgic and galvanising paean to Britain before it shuts up shop altogether

The Nanny State Made Me covers the trends of British politics from post-war social reform to current day career politicians. As Maconie is quick to point out early on in his polemic, the term ‘the nanny state’ was coined as a dismissal of over-interference by the state on the personal lives of the electorate. Yet he argues that the state’s progressive policies as we recovered from the war challenged the established order and brought about a golden era.

Those most likely to pick up The Nanny State Made Me will already be sympathetic to Maconie’s views. The purpose of his book, therefore, is to spur his readers into action before the hard-won gains made by The Nanny State, including the National Health Service, are lost forever.

Maconie writes with the voice of the people, but it is a voice that is informed, reasoned and full of enthusiasm. He backs up his statements with apposite references and anecdotes. For me, his argument most struck a chord in the chapter given over to libraries and literacy. One poignant example given was the Chinese government’s realisation, according to Neil Gaiman, that innovation in technology and science came through an exposure to science fiction and fantasy in childhood. Also, the American prison service’s algorithm used for planning future need for prison accommodation is based on the direct correlation between illiteracy and incarceration.

Stand with Maconie. Defend every Briton's right to a good education, an effective health service and affordable housing, as well as free access to books and green space.

My thanks to NetGalley and Penguin Random House UK, Ebury Publishing, for the ARC.

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I thoroughly enjoyed this book even though at times I was furious! (not at the book but at the actions of some politicians who are supposed to work for the betterment of the country)

The book was well structured, each section focussing on a different aspect of the ‘nanny state’ Each section was a satisfying combination of facts, figures & history alongside witty stories about the author’s experiences growing up.

The wit & humour of the author brought some light to what may have been a very dry topic if just given the history. I do suspect that the writing maybe viewed as somewhat one sided but it is a side of the argument against privatisation that is worth a listen. If only our current politicians would listen!

I would’ve given this 5 stars but found the arguments being repeated a little across each section.

On the whole though a really well written and enjoyable book about politics and society. I would highly recommend it.

I received a free copy of this book from netgalley, in return for an honest review.

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This was a nostalgic walk down memory lane for me. It brought back so many childhood memories of how life used to be, growing up in the 60’s/70’s.
As an adult now, it made things clearer. Events and occurrences, history and politics that I was then too young to understand, have been given clarity by reading this book.
It made me think back to when life seemed uncomplicated - until it was made so by the growing up process.
It’s a great read and everyone who grew up at that time, in Britain, should read it. It felt like coming home and there’s a good bit of humour and warmth in it too. I loved it.

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I grew up with Thatcher and Maconie in the north east of England and was interested to see what he had to say. A lot of his opinions resonate, or I can at least see where he is coming from. A slow read but only because I wanted to absorb the detail or went back to read bits. Arguably Maconie has picked the research to back himself up but doesn't every writer? I definitely agree that five years ago I would never have expected to see the buffoon which is Boris as PM. A truly unbelievable state of affairs. Britain might not be as great as it once was but we can be proud of ourselves if we only see the way to making the NHS, schools, libraries, housing work for the people instead of for managers, stopping tinkering and fiddling for the sake of it and investing in the nation and its future. That stands regardless of whether someone voted Leave or Remain. The deed is done and now we must embrace self-care as a nation. Machine's book is a good place to start.

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This book looks at the state or welfare state and how it helps and made people (cira 1945-1979) and Maconie with his social history wit and charm navigates us through different parts of what was coined "The Nanny State" and how it has been eroded and chipped away at since the sweeping election of the Torys in 1979. As it looks at the NHS, schools, transport, leisure, social housing and how the labour government of Atlee tried to elevate the problems of poverty, ill health in establishing the welfare state. Enjoyed this book and makes you realise to those who grew up in the period pre 1979 how lucky they were.

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Although I am not a socialist or even a Labour supporter I found myself agreeing with many of the arguments in Stuart Maconie's latest book. Most of the stories and examples are from the north of England, but that is to be expected as Maconie is a northerner and many of the issues do not affect the more affluent SE in such a widespread way. In particular, the privatisation of the railways and buses was probably more cataclysmic than Beeching's cuts. The writing style is pretty accessible but it still took a long time to read this book, possibly because it is so thought provoking. Worth reading.

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I was delighted to be able to read this book, as I have enjoyed many of the author's other books, and I was interested to read his views on the Welfare State. The book didn't disappoint. It is written in a very readable style, as usual, and although I don't agree with the author's political view, it is hard to argue that the Welfare State, probably this country's greatest achievement in modern times, is being dismantled, and we as a society are the poorer for it. Whilst I don't agree that the 1970's were a great period for Britain, and I certainly don't agree with the author that unions holding the country to ransom was acceptable, I defy anyone not to feel sad that many of the things we took for granted in the 70's are no longer available for ordinary people.I would definitely recommend this excellent book.

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Thank you so much for the chance to read an advance copy of this book - it was difficult to wait until March for its publication!
Stuart Maconie’s social histories are always fascinating, drawing parallels between what has gone before and the present day. Having grown up in the era (and area) he writes about here, so many things resonated with me. The narrative around the 1970s at the moment often paints a picture of unremitting grimness and despair so it is really refreshing to see the case made for it being a bit of a Golden Age for the welfare state. Of course, this wasn’t true of everywhere, but where it worked well, it provided many opportunities for the working classes that have been gradually, stealthily, dismantled since. So what’s left can appear a bit grey and oppressive, because as he points out, it needs investment, engagement and commitment to make it successful.
As always, he includes plenty of references to other voices and work which can be followed up. I felt Caitlin Moran was given a tad too much airtime (she’s not the only social commentator in town, after all) but I’m not going to dock a star for that, because the rest is just a superb unpicking of post-war policy and vision and an absolute thought-provoking wonder to read.
I found the sections on Education and Libraries the most interesting, because they reflect my working life, the roots of which are entrenched in precisely the system he describes. They were also the saddest sections when you look back at what libraries were originally intended to be and how they are the downtrodden, underfunded neglected mess they are now.

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