<b>The clue to our future lies in our past and Toye has winkled it out with elegant and devastating precision.</b> Anyone who wants to find the nuggets of hope in today's Britain as we approach a watershed election needs to read this book and see what pragmatic idealism achieved between 1945 and 1951.
- Chris Bryant, MP for Rhondda,
This is a stunningly original revision of the Attlee government and its impact on British society.<b> It's the best book I've read this year</b>.
- Frank Field, former MP for Birkenhead,
A hundred years since the first Labour Government, Richard Toye’s <b>readable and persuasive study</b> argues that while arguments over the party’s past have often shaped its future, Labour does best when it forgets old battles and finds a way to combine hope with pragmatism. The history of the era is highly contested, but the book does <b>a masterly job</b> of picking through the bitterness to understand what has worked in the past and has a reasonable chance of working in the future.
- Anne Perkins, author of 'A Very British Strike' and 'Red Queen: The Authorized Biography of Barbara Castle',
This book <b>illustrates how the key players in the Attlee Government combined their radical idealism and pragmatism to seize their moment and create such a sense of purpose and hope</b> that was truly transformative and set the standard for all subsequent Labour administrations to live up to.
- John McDonnell, MP for Hayes and Harlington,