British actor Ben Onwukwe contributes the adamant and histrionic tone and British accent that are appropriate to a postcolonial audit of Britain's colonial past. The focal point of the narrative is September 29, 1923, the date that marked the Empire's greatest territorial expanse. All before that was acquisition; all after it, loss. And well-deserved loss, too, by this account. Rapacity, greed, racial prejudice, and economic oppression abound--all cloaked, often infuriatingly, in a Eurocentric paternalism and all expressed here in towering vowels and resounding periods. The narrative proves insightful and rich in drama but is heavily overladen. Narrator overpowers narrative, and voice upstages content. The effect is a bit cloying and tiring, but Onwukwe is a sufferable ham, and this is history everyone should hear. D.A.W. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
NOVEMBER 2023 - AudioFile
07/17/2023
Historian Parker (Panama Fever ) offers a panoramic view of the British Empire on September 29, 1923—the day Britain began administering the territories of Palestine and Transjordan and the empire reached its “maximum territorial extent”—in this portrait of a world on the cusp of sweeping change. Surveying critical colonial outposts ranging across half the globe, from the small, phosphate-rich Ocean Island, located “a short distance from the international dateline” in the Pacific, to Jamaica in the Caribbean Sea, Parker vividly demonstrates the empire’s vast reach and the “impossibly conflicting interests between government the governed.” He juxtaposes colonial narratives told from positions of cultural authority within the empire, such as those of novelists E.M. Forester and George Orwell, with the work of anticolonial leaders, including India’s Jawaharlal Nehru and Herbert Macaulay, the “Gandhi of Nigeria.” The inherent brutality of colonialism is evident in each region that Parker spotlights, providing a stark reminder that the goal of imperialism is to exploit faraway populations for the enrichment of the homeland. Accessible and sturdy, this expansive account provides solid ground for understanding the decline of the British Empire. It’s an eye-opening and a unique vantage point from which to study 20th-century history. (Sept.)
A sprawling account of the British empire…The portrait is achieved with a wide-angled lens, but the choice of a single day also brings focus…What emerges is a picture of an empire straining under the weight of its own contradictions. The British thought of their role as an enlightened one: stopping tribal warfare and introducing modern health care and education. Yet they brought forced labour and colonial massacres, racist rules, and substandard health care and education. Rather than simply stating so baldly, Mr Parker points this out through copious examples and meticulous research. He appears to have read the front page of every newspaper published in the empire on that day.”—The Economist “Parker’s book provides far more than just an Anglo-centric perspective on the British Empire. His reading of numerous local writers and politicians, ranging from Jawaharlal Nehru in India to Marcus Garvey in Jamaica, gives One Fine Day the kaleidoscopic dimension of a Ken Burns documentary.”—Air Mail “His research is prodigious, his mastery of detail impeccable… Although Parker places considerable weight on the darker side of empire—the violence, the condescension, the repression—he never hectors the reader, allowing the stories to speak for themselves.”—Sunday Times (UK) “Brilliant…extraordinary… no attempt is made to shy away from the white supremacism at the core of the Empire’s mythology – but it also turns up glimpses of humanist benevolence and grand ambition. It is a book for serious people who can handle difficult moral contradictions, and will undoubtedly annoy zealots of all stripes.”—The Telegraph (UK) “A compelling read… Part of what makes this book such a fascinating read is that we all know what’s about to come, but since Parker sticks to his premise, we remain in a sense of suspense throughout.... The end of empire does not come at the end of One Fine Day, but we leave with a much clearer sense of why its demise, if not inevitable, was certainly impending.”—The Observer (UK) "What we have here is a fair appraisal of the lie of the land, elegantly synthesised and compressed. Parker is especially strong in his evocation of the ruling caste."—The Times (UK) “Without ever assuming the role of anti-imperialist preacher, [Parker] lets the words and deeds of the imperialists themselves reveal how far from glorious the real world of the British Empire was.”—Irish Times “Parker offers an eclectic collection of illuminating observations—people, places and attitudes. He avoids the strident debate about right and wrong, instead delivering a panorama of complexity, and allowing us to draw our own conclusions.” —The Times (UK) best books of the year “A panoramic view of the British Empire on September 29, 1923… Parker vividly demonstrates the empire’s vast reach and the ‘impossibly conflicting interests between government [and] the governed.’…Accessible and sturdy, this expansive account provides solid ground for understanding the decline of the British Empire. It’s an eye-opening and a unique vantage point from which to study 20th-century history.”—Publishers Weekly “An ambitious history of the beginning of the end of vast dominions of the British Empire on Sept. 29, 1923… a multilayered portrait, with deep contextual background…An impressive work of research and synthesis tracing the end of an empire.”—Kirkus “There is something Shakespearian about Matthew Parker’s insightful argument that it was at exactly the time the British Empire reached its greatest territorial size that the factors coalesced which were to destroy it. Whether you regard the British Empire as an overall boon—as I do—or as an abomination, Parker has rendered a signal service by convincingly pinpointing the exact fulcrum moment in its half-millennium-long history.”—Andrew Roberts, author of Churchill “Marvellous. Escapes the inane, balance-sheet view of empire and sees it in its full complexity.”—Sathnam Sanghera, author of Empireland “Extraordinary. Parker’s magisterial sweep through one day of British imperial history and culture plunges us into the global complexity of the British Empire, bringing the world of a century ago to fresh, vivid life. An astonishing achievement.”—Alex von Tunzelmann, author of Indian Summer and Fallen Idols “An engrossing and wide-ranging account of the zenith of the British Empire—with all the contradictions, brittleness, ambition and hubris that moment entailed. Across Continents and characters, Matthew Parker provides a new, global history of British imperialism which feels both epic and immediate.”—Tristram Hunt, director of the Victoria and Albert Museum “Exquisitely crafted and beautifully written, full of delicious detail and extraordinary insight.”—Augustus Casely-Hayford, OBE, curator, cultural historian, and director of V&A East
There is something Shakespearian about Matthew Parker’s insightful argument that it was at exactly the time the British Empire reached its greatest territorial size that the factors coalesced which were to destroy it. Whether you regard the British Empire as an overall boon—as I do—or as an abomination, Parker has rendered a signal service by convincingly pinpointing the exact fulcrum moment in its half-millennium-long history.
author of Churchill Andrew Roberts
An engrossing and wide-ranging account of the zenith of the British Empire—with all the contradictions, brittleness, ambition and hubris that moment entailed. Across Continents and characters, Matthew Parker provides a new, global history of British imperialism which feels both epic and immediate.
director of the Victoria and Albert Museum Tristram Hunt
Marvellous. Escapes the inane, balance-sheet view of empire and sees it in its full complexity.
author of Empireland Sathnam Sanghera
Extraordinary. Parker’s magisterial sweep through one day of British imperial history and culture plunges us into the global complexity of the British Empire, bringing the world of a century ago to fresh, vivid life. An astonishing achievement.
author of Indian Summer and Fallen Idols Alex von Tunzelmann
Exquisitely crafted and beautifully written, full of delicious detail and extraordinary insight.
2023-07-11 An ambitious history of the beginning of the end of vast dominions of the British Empire on Sept. 29, 1923.
British historian Parker, author of Battle of Britain , Panama Fever , and other books, digs into the archives to create a multilayered portrait, with deep contextual background, of the British Empire in 1923. At the time, it “covered nearly 14 million square miles, 150 times the size of Great Britain and a quarter of the world’s land area. Four hundred and sixty million people, a fifth of the world’s population, [were] subjects of Britain’s King-Emperor George V.” Yet even at its apex, the empire was showing cracks in the facade, whether in Palestine, Cape Town, Nairobi, Sydney, Rangoon, or Jamaica, as the author illustrates incrementally through newspaper articles, diaries, documents, novels, and other sources. Trade had established British global supremacy, highlighted by the dominance of the British navy, yet World War I had ruptured the old order. Across the empire, the entire social and economic edifice, based largely on race and privilege, was being questioned. Parker astutely examines pieces of the empire in turn, exploring relevant economic, political, social, and racial developments. Australia, for example, where D.H. Lawrence had just published his novel Kangaroo , desperately needed to attract new settlers. The author also chronicles the journey of the dissipated Prince of Wales, who was touring multiethnic India followed by Malaya, where rubber was supplanting tin production and the attitude of British “paternalistic trusteeship” was uneasily on display. In addition to social and political figures, Parker investigates the work of authors such as Somerset Maugham, George Orwell, and E.M. Forster, who presented frankly critical depictions of the failing order. The author also introduces the first political movements to challenge the British government in India, Kenya, Nigeria, and the West Indies.
An impressive work of research and synthesis tracing the end of an empire.