Tony Blair’s new book offers hard-earned lessons to pass along

Blair’s On Leadership is not a tell-all rehash of old political battles. No scores are settled or secrets spilled. Instead, he offers his insights on leadership techniques and skills, including those obtained in his post-political career advising global leaders.
‘She knows how to make a splash, and knows how to get things done,’ says author of new Freeland book

Catherine Tsalikis spent four years researching Chrystia Freeland’s life. She tells The Hill Times that she sees two constants in the former deputy prime minister’s life: principle and loyalty.
The Hill Times’ Top 100 Best Books in 2024

2. A Most Extraordinary Ride: Space, Politics, and the Pursuit of a Canadian Dream, by Marc Garneau, Signal/McClelland & Stewart, Penguin Random House Canada, 328 pp., $40. 3. A Nation’s Paper: The Globe and Mail in the Life of Canada, edited by John Ibbitson, Signal/McClelland & Stewart, Penguin Random House Canada, 315 pp., $45. 4. […]
A formidable exercise in truth telling

Alex Himelfarb’s book Breaking Free is a stunning accomplishment, providing new insights into the analysis of neoliberalism. It is unsurpassed.
Carol Off’s timely warning on the use—and misuse—of words

Author and journalist Carol Off pulls no punches in describing the great strain democracy and the dissemination of factual reality are currently under, as well as the forces trying to ensure this polarization and animosity continues.
My Life in Politics is a formidable read

In many ways, Lloyd Axworthy is more of a golden boy than the statue that sits atop the Manitoba legislature.
Angus says his new book is not a lament, it’s a call to arms

Charlie Angus talks about his new book, Dangerous Memory: Coming of Age in the Decade of Greed, and about the state of federal politics today.
What’s so wrong with Canada that we best snap out of our complacency?

Through nine persuasive yet demoralizing chapters, Jonathan Manthorpe leads us through his rational report card on our nation’s prospects. If we don’t attend to matters now, he warns, Canada is Argentina waiting to happen.
Trudeau: he eludes us still

Stephen Maher and Paul Wells both offer insights into who Justin Trudeau is and what makes him tick. But one wonders if we’ll ever know.
Author of Trudeau biography says he doesn’t think Trudeau will run again, but Lanthier says ‘even if he might lose, he wants to go down fighting against Pierre Poilievre’

In a sensational new book, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he’s looking forward to running against Pierre Poilievre because he doesn’t want Poilievre to run the country, but author and veteran journalist Stephen Maher says he doesn’t think Trudeau will run again.