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Author | Boris Johnson |
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Language | English |
Genre | Memoir |
Published | 10 October 2024 |
Publisher | William Collins |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Pages | 784 |
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Mayor of London Foreign Secretary First ministry and term Second ministry and term
Post-premiership Bibliography In popular culture ![]() | ||
Unleashed is a memoir written by Boris Johnson, who was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 2019 to 2022. It was published by HarperCollins in the UK on 10 October 2024 and in the US on 15 October 2024.
Johnson's forthcoming memoir was announced in January 2023. [1] He received a £510,000 advance. [2] The title, Unleashed, and UK and US publication dates on 10 and 15 October 2024 were announced in June 2024. [3] [4] [5] Excerpts were published in the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday on the weekend of 27–29 September. [6]
Two days before the publication date in London, a launch party was held at the headquarters of the Institute of Directors, attended by James Cleverly, Michael Gove, Kit Malthouse, Jacob Rees-Mogg, Priti Patel, Grant Shapps, and Ben Wallace among others. [7]
In the lead up to release Unleashed topped Amazon UK Books' Best Sellers list. [8] The book stayed at number 1 in the top 50 in its second week since publication even though sales for that week were down 62% on the first week. [9]
Reports on Unleashed have noted that Johnson's style is unconventional for a prime minister's memoirs, dramatic and full of wordplay like his speaking style or his newspaper columns, [10] [11] [12] and also full of exclamations like "kerchingeroo!" and "BIFF!" [13] [14] The book contains several revelations: that he considered a military raid on The Netherlands to secure the release of Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine doses, [6] [11] [15] [16] that he himself became seriously ill with Covid and "might have carked it" but for the care he received in hospital, [15] [16] [17] that on a request, he vainly attempted to dissuade Prince Harry from leaving the UK by means of a "manly pep talk", [16] [18] [19] and that he considers it possible that a listening device found in his personal toilet at the Foreign Office in 2017 had been placed there by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. [11] [16] [20] [21] He also writes that Queen Elizabeth II's cause of death was bone cancer. [11] [13] [16]
In interviews promoting the book, Johnson also said that Donald Trump would have prevented the Russian invasion of Ukraine if he had been re-elected in 2020, [21] and that he is "optimistic" about a second Trump presidency. [22]
A reviewer for The Times characterised Unleashed as "important historical document, but not necessarily a valuable one ... very generously seasoned with juvenile gags, some of more than acceptable quality"; [13] a reviewer for the Washington Post as "Funny. Frustrating. And not entirely believable." [11] The Observer review warned: "No phrase that Johnson writes in this book comes entirely unlaced with hyperbole or self-serving spin. You'd hope the copy editors were being paid by the marginal note and had access to physiotherapy for RSI." [23] Under the headline "Memoirs of a clown", the reviewer for The Guardian noted that Johnson "does not do reflective" and called the book "entertaining but ... irritating for its lack of structure". [10] Reviewing the book for The New Statesman , Nicola Sturgeon, the former Scottish First Minister, characterised it as "not as bad as I thought it would be" but too unserious: "There is nothing that he won't make a crass joke about if it serves his narrative purpose." [12] The reviewer for The Independent called it "shameless, sour, predictable, self-exculpatory stuff"; [24] the review in The Economist is titled "Boris Johnson shows how not to write a political memoir". [14]
The Daily Mail, in introducing its serialised excerpts, called Unleashed "the political memoir of the century". [11] [10] The reviewer for The Telegraph gave it five stars, praising Johnson's writing but noting that "the games with words ... can distract" and that the book offers little insight into his "inner life". [25]
It's routine for former politicians to rock their party's boat. Ordinarily, you'd release a book like this on the first day of the relevant conference, for maximum effect – it just so happens that a leadership election has provided an even juicier opportunity.