There's exceptionally clear, considered analysis of US-UK relations. There's the peerless experience, access, and sometimes tantalising insight. But there's also (and this is said not entirely positively) a half-written autobiography with some twee/ some endearingly human anecdotes, some brilliant political analysis, and a strong push to be contemporary about covid.
With that, one can see that the ambition may be too broad, that genres are crossed, and that further editing could have been beneficial. It feels almost as though he was trying to write several books simultaneously in his liberation, and many of them are included in this volume, with each one distracting from rather than strengthening the other. It could have been a first-hand political thriller/ an autobiography at the end of a stellar career/ tips of the trade and reflections on. diplomacy.
Those small issues though do not take away from the fact that this is a brilliant book, by a brilliant (but necessarily somewhat tight-lipped) man. And all the more jarring when read just days before the US election.
Read alongside some of the more salacious books about Trump and his Presidency, this book is an essential counterpoint.
Further, for the student or practitioner of diplomacy, read with Brian Barder's or Tom Fletcher's books, it brings so much to life.