The Bedside Guardian 2011

Paul Johnson author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Guardian Books

Published:17th Nov '11

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The Bedside Guardian 2011 cover

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2011 was an extraordinary year. And the "Guardian" was at the very heart of it. This title documents and debates the year's events. It explains why the Fukushima nuclear disaster affirmed the author's faith in atomic energy, satirises the case of a Twitter user convicted over a joke, and lambasts the coalition's plans for the NHS.2011 was an extraordinary year. And the "Guardian" was at the very heart of it. It was a year that will be remembered for the phone hacking scandal, uncovered only by the persistence and skill of "Guardian" investigative reporter Nick Davies, and the seismic changes it forced in the relationship between parliament, the media and the police. It was a year that will be remembered because a "Guardian" reporter was passed a memory stick, small enough to hang on a key ring, but which contained 250.000 US diplomatic cables whose publication provoked reverberations around the world. And it was a year packed with drama, tragedy and inspiration: the Arab spring; the tsunami in Japan; the August riots; and, the killing of Bin Laden, the capture of Mladic, and a royal wedding. The year's events are vividly documented and debated here by writers including David Leigh, Nick Davies, Marina Hyde, Polly Toynbee, Hadley Freeman, Simon Jenkins and Jonathan Freedland. George Monbiot explains why the Fukushima nuclear disaster affirmed his faith in atomic energy, Charlie Brooker brilliantly satirises the case of a Twitter user convicted over a joke, and Margaret Drabble lambasts the coalition's plans for the NHS. Richard Williams celebrates the life of Seve Ballesteros, Declan Walsh reveals the truth about Osama bin Laden's last hours, and Jack Shenker reports on being caught in a roundup by Egypt's notorious security services just before the fall of Hosni Mubarak - in a revolution documented here by Ahdaf Soueif from Tahrir Square. Away from the big news stories, Decca Aitkenhead reveals another side of Ann Widdecombe, poet Simon Armitage has a difficult encounter with his musical hero Morrissey, and Steve Bell looks back over 30 years of cartooning for the "Guardian". Martin Kettle contemplates whether MI5 were right to spy on his father, and regular "Guardian" correspondent David Hockney dashes off another iPad-composed letter to the paper - this time not about smoking.

ISBN: 9780852652657

Dimensions: 204mm x 138mm x 32mm

Weight: 444g

352 pages