Patrick Bishop’s biography of Airey Neave is an interesting, compelling and fascinating look into a time, place and world that was rapidly changing, evolving, and increasingly becoming more complex. The author has the skill, gift, and artistic awareness to write about a man who was very private, and his life was in many ways, an extraordinary journey encompassing interlocking and related careers. Airey Neave was background, a privileged establishment young Englishman who attended Eaton, with all of the advantages which Eaton brought to a young man who was privileged enough to call himself a graduate.
In writing this illumative biography, Patrick Bishop journeys through a series of doorways, each of which lead to a grand staircase, that when taken together, create a compelling and interesting study. Airey Neave was captured during the 2nd World War, and is best known for that period of his career as the first individual to escape from the German prison camp, deemed to be impossible to escape from, called Colditz. He went on during the war, becoming a leading figure in establishing escape and evading organizations in occupied Europe that helped downed fliers from the Allied Services to reach the safety of Spain and ultimately, rehabilitation back to the United Kingdom. Because he was a lawyer by training, he was seconded to act as one of the Allied members of the Tribunal at Nuremberg War Crimes Trials, an experience which left an indelible imprint on his character and values.
At the end of the war, he returned to the legal practice, and then in 1953, was elected a conservative member of Parliament for the district and town he lived in, Abingdon. His political career was highlighted by his support and skills at engineering the election of Margaret Thatcher by mounting a brilliantly manipulated campaign in 1975 won Margaret Thatcher of the Tory Party.
One of the most interesting aspects of this fascinating biography are the vignettes of a series of famous politicians that Patrick Bishop, the author, brings through his narrative. Indeed, you could say that this is as much a political history of the British Government in the ‘70s and ‘80s as it is the biography of Airey Neave.
As would be expected, from a man like Airey Neave, his death was as dramatic as his life, on the 30th of March, 1979, a bomb planted beneath his car exploded while he was driving up the ramp of the House of Commons car park, killing him. The murder was claimed by the breakaway Irish Republican Group, INLA. It is interesting his killers have never been identified. And the records surrounding his murder are still sealed and will not become public until 2075.
Patrick Bishop’s fast-paced and well-researched biography portrays a world that has all but disappeared from British society and politics today. Indeed, you could say it is a sympathetic portrait of a vanished breed, a public figure, shaped by his experience in war, driven by a strong set of moral values, grounded in patriotism and honor. I think it is a book that everyone would enjoy reading for quality of its writing and the insight it gives into a different era, place and time.