Conrad and Lady Black: Dancing on the Edge
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Tom Bower. Conrad and Lady Black: Dancing on the Edge
Conrad and Lady Black. Dancing on the Edge
DEDICATION
CONTENTS
PREFACE
INTRODUCTION. The Wedding,26 January 1985
1 A Timely Death
2 The Stain
3 The Survivor
4 Salvation
5 The Visit
6 Inevitable Union
7 Demons
8 Bliss
9 The Torpedo
10 The A-List
11 Sliding Towards the Edge
12 ‘Thief!’
13 The Purist
14 Resurrection
15 The Trial
INDEX
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
NOTES
PRAISE
OTHER WORKS
COPYRIGHT
ABOUT THE PUBLISHER
Отрывок из книги
Tom Bower
Title Page
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The escape from ‘mischief and debauchery’ was consolidated the following year, when Montreal hosted the world fair Expo 67, and General de Gaulle visited Canada. The combination of parties and witnessing de Gaulle’s provocative remark that Quebec should declare its independence from Canada taught Black, he would later claim, that he had been ‘a rather silly and undiscriminating rebel’. He enrolled for a law degree at Laval University in Quebec City, an additional challenge because he was one of few English students among the French, although this was a test he endured in comfort. He rented a superb penthouse overlooking the St Lawrence river in the fashionable Port Royal Building close to the entertainment quarter, and drove a Cadillac. Since Peter White had become an assistant to Daniel Johnson, the Premier of Quebec, Conrad Black could combine studying, social life and involvement at the heart of Canada’s political life.
As a conservative in a leftish-liberal country divided by the French and English languages, Black suffered a double frustration. The Conservatives had repeatedly failed to offer any solution to Canada’s permanent problem of containing the separatist demands of the French in Quebec; and secondly, as he was told by a Liberal politician, ‘We’re the party of government here. The Conservatives are like mumps. You get them once a lifetime.’ Nevertheless, Black engaged self-confidently in politics, supporting the English-speaking Conservatives, and to his delight people took seriously his self-conscious party pieces, cultivated since childhood. Using unusually complex vocabulary, he effortlessly recited endless historical details from memory in performances which, he persuaded himself, convinced audiences of his genius and his political acumen.
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