My book of 2022 - I read and absorbed every page, engrossed and fascinated.
It is the human experience of a successful Black barrister in London - in which he takes the reader thr0ugh his struggles from childhood to succeed in today's Britain.
His analyses of how the cards are stacked so unfairly against minorities (he is almost more aware of class than race, although they run parallel in much of his writing.
He rips into shreds the liberal concepts of social mobility, and statememnts that we live in a meritocracy. Much of his analysis is levelled against 'New Labour' thinking, which he feel is more dangerous than Conservatism because it claims to not show any prejudice - Mohamed's own story has so much to say about the falseness of these claims.
There is so much in this book about his struggles, how he gets round the hardest stubling blocks - a mix of GOOD LUCK, IMAGINATION AND THINKING AHEAD - his advice as to how to play the games right , plan where you want to go, be clear about the climb needed and the setbacks that will abound, is excellent and fascinating and should be read by all.
Mostly he argues for a massive change in society and our priorities - since, as long as there is a small elite at the top, those with massive advantages (education, wealth, class inheritance) are almost bound to remain the elite - and greatly resent upstarts whose success means their childrens failure.
I would so love to be in a meeting where he is talking to Black or White workng class youngsters labelled (including self-labelled) 'no-hopers' - the experience might be electric ....