Chris Patten is Chancellor of Oxford University. When MP for Bath (1979-92) he served as Minister for Overseas Development, Secretary of State for the Environment and Chairman of the Conservative Party. He was Governor of Hong Kong from 1992 until 1997, Chairman for the Independent Commission on Policing after the Good Friday Agreement in 1998 and European Commissioner for External Relations from 1999 until 2004. The Observer has described him as 'the best Tory Prime Minister we never had'.
Patten's diaries over the next five years describe in detail his
day-to-day battles with the Chinese ... a terrific tale, one that
will appeal not just to Sinologists but to all historians, since it
is effectively a record of the end days of an empire ... At times,
the diaries read like a novel ... His chatty style makes the[m] an
easy read
*Daily Telegraph*
wonderfully waspish, fascinating and rude in spades about all the
people who deserve nothing less.
*Literary Review*
Patten has now published his diaries of five tumultuous years in
office, from 1992 to 1997, recording battles against the comrades,
the tycoons, the doubters in the cabinet and mandarins everywhere.
As you might expect, they are urbane, sardonic and quotable ... his
plan was to extend the vote and to democratise local government.
The magnates were aghast, the diplomats shuddered and the Chinese,
who loathed such notions, ostracised the governor after one round
of talks in Beijing ... Yet it was a brave and decent thing to try,
an endeavour recorded for posterity in these pages.
*Sunday Times*
the diaries themselves, kept from the time of his appointment in
April 1992 to the handover just over five years later, have not
been seen before and make for consistently good reading ... Patten
also has something powerful to say about Hong Kong today. This
takes the form of a passionate polemical essay, written as a
postscript to the diaries, about China's increasingly brutal
sabotage of the Hong Kong deals. Patten brings terrific energy to
his denunciation of Xi Jinping's crackdown on the territory. ...
Twenty-five years on, with the global order turning more
nationalist and inward, the diaries are a witness that despite his
limited achievements, it was Patten who called the outcome more
accurately and more honourably than they did.
*The Guardian*
As an insider's account, The Hong Kong Diaries is filled with that
daily sense of grappling with a multi-headed hydra ... There is an
inescapable poignancy to reading this diary in 2022: it is a
snapshot of a unique moment at the end of empire, and a now fading
picture of an extraordinary society that flourished in its brief
moment of freedom.
*Times Literary Supplement*
Lord Patten spent much of his time in Hong Kong struggling against
British officials and members of the local elite who believed it
was not worth trying to push China to accept more democracy in
pre-handover Hong Kong-much less expanding it without China's
approval. Some of the most riveting detail in this rich volume
relates to these tensions. ... The author's entertaining language
brings these diaries to life.
*Economist*
In Patten's diaries we see everyone from Mother Teresa to Margaret
Thatcher passing through the governor's living room ... Eschewing
the feathered hat, the uniform and all the other flummery that goes
with governing an outpost of the British empire, he plunges into a
series of walkabouts, holds public meetings, looks for ways of
redistributing some wealth and makes no secret of his sympathy for
the democrats.
*Spectator*
minutely observe[s] how China broke its promises - first
insidiously and gradually and then openly and suddenly - and the
impact on the lives of Hong Kongers ... Patten's diaries of his
frustrating yet rewarding stint as governor cover the years from
1992 to the 1997 handover ... [he] is a genial and self-deprecating
companion through the years leading up to the handover ... In the
course of his diaries, Patten argues convincingly that for Britain
or any other country to abandon liberal principles and yield to the
Chinese Communist party's demands at every opportunity brings
neither political nor commercial benefits. The trade and investment
statistics he cites from the final decades of British rule do
indeed suggest there is little correlation between grovelling and
real rewards for business.
*Financial Times*
In The Hong Kong Diaries Chris Patten details his struggle as the
last governor of Hong Kong to energise the dying days of British
rule. Patten's conviction that planting the seed of democracy would
make Hong Kong more resilient after the handover to China will long
be debated by historians, and this book will be an essential
source. But it is also to be treasured for the brilliant and fierce
concluding essay on China's recent crackdown which has destroyed
Hong Kong's way of life. As Patten says, 'Hong Kong's fight is our
fight'.
*Engelsberg Ideas Books of the Year*
The Hong Kong Diaries ... details his persistent but ultimately
failed efforts to secure the continuance of Hong Kong's freedoms
... Despite Mr. Patten's best efforts, Hong Kong became the canary
in the mine shaft, showing what happens when the Chinese Communist
Party is allowed to get its way.
*Wall Street Journal*
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