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Christopher Booker

Christopher John Penrice Booker (7 October 1937 – 3 July 2019) was an English journalist and author. He was a founder and first editor of the satirical magazine Private Eye in 1961. From 1990 onward he was a columnist for The Sunday Telegraph.[1] In 2009, he published The Real Global Warming Disaster. He also disputed the link between passive smoking and cancer,[2][3] and the dangers posed by asbestos.[4][5] In his Sunday Telegraph section he frequently commented on the UK Family Courts and Social Services.[6]

In collaboration with Richard North, Booker wrote a variety of publications advancing a Eurosceptic, though academically disputed,[7][8] popular historiography of the European Union. The best-known of these is The Great Deception.

Career edit

Early life edit

Booker was educated at Dragon School, Shrewsbury School[9] and Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, where he read History.[10]

1960s edit

With fellow Salopians Richard Ingrams and Willie Rushton he founded Private Eye in 1961, and was its first editor. He was ousted by Ingrams in 1963. Returning in 1965, he remained a permanent member of the magazine's collaborative joke-writing team thereafter (with Ingrams, Barry Fantoni and current editor Ian Hislop) till his death.[11]

Booker began writing jazz reviews for The Daily Telegraph while at university.[12] From 1961 to 1964, he wrote about jazz for The Sunday Telegraph as well. His contributions included a positive account of a concert given by the pianist Erroll Garner, which did not happen; it was a late cancellation.[13] In 1962, he became the resident political scriptwriter on the BBC satire show That Was The Week That Was, notably contributing sketches on Home Secretary Henry Brooke and Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home which have often been cited as examples of the programme's outspoken style.

From 1964 he became a Spectator columnist, writing on the press and TV, and in 1969 published The Neophiliacs: A Study of the Revolution in English Life in the Fifties and Sixties, a highly critical analysis of the role played by fantasy in the political and social life of those decades. He was married to the novelist Emma Tennant between 1963 and 1968.

1970s edit

He married Christine Verity, his second wife, in 1972.[9] In the early 1970s, Booker campaigned against both the building of tower blocks and the wholesale redevelopment of Britain's cities according to the ideology of the modernist movement. In 1973, he published Goodbye London (written with Candida Lycett Green), and, with Bennie Gray, was the IPC Campaigning Journalist of the Year. He made a documentary for the BBC in 1979 on modernist architecture, called City of Towers. In the mid-1970s he contributed a regular quiz to Melvyn Bragg's BBC literary programme Read All About It, and he returned to The Spectator as a weekly contributor (1976–1981), when he also became a lead book-reviewer for The Sunday Telegraph. In 1979, he married Valerie Patrick, his third wife, with whom he had two sons; they lived in Somerset.[9]

1980s edit

In 1980, he published The Seventies: Portrait Of A Decade, and covered the Moscow Olympics for the Daily Mail, publishing The Games War: A Moscow Journal the following year. Between 1987 and 1990 he wrote The Daily Telegraph's The Way of the World column (a satirical column originated by Michael Wharton) as "Peter Simple II", and in 1990 swapped places with Auberon Waugh, after mocking Waugh who firmly requested he should write the column instead of Booker, to become a weekly columnist on The Sunday Telegraph, where he remained until March 2019.[12]

Between 1986 and 1990 he took part in a detailed investigation, chaired by Brigadier Tony Cowgill, of the charges that senior British politicians, including Harold Macmillan, had been guilty of a serious war crime in handing over thousands of Cossack and Yugoslav prisoners to the Communists at the end of the war in 1945. Their report, published in 1990, presented those events in a very different light, and Booker later published a lengthy analysis of the controversy in A Looking Glass Tragedy (1997).

After 1990 edit

From 1992 he focused more on the role played in British life by bureaucratic regulation and the European Union, forming a professional collaboration with Richard North, and they subsequently co-authored a series of books, including The Mad Officials: How The Bureaucrats Are Strangling Britain (1994); The Castle of Lies (1996); The Great Deception (2003), a critical history of the European Union; and Scared To Death: From BSE To Global Warming, Why Scares Are Costing Us The Earth (2007), a study of the part played in Western society in recent decades by the 'scare phenomenon'.

In 2004, he published The Seven Basic Plots: Why We Tell Stories, a Jungian-influenced analysis of stories and their psychological meaning, on which he had been working for over 30 years. The book was dismissed by Adam Mars-Jones, who objected to Booker employing his generalisations about conventional plot structures prescriptively: "He sets up criteria for art, and ends up condemning Rigoletto, The Cherry Orchard, Wagner, Proust, Joyce, Kafka and Lawrence – the list goes on – while praising Crocodile Dundee, ET and Terminator 2".[14]

Fay Weldon wrote "This is the most extraordinary, exhilarating book. It always seemed to me that 'the story' was God's way of giving meaning to crude creation. Booker now interprets the mind of God, and analyses not just the novel – which will never to me be quite the same again – but puts the narrative of contemporary human affairs into a new perspective. If it took its author a lifetime to write, one can only feel gratitude that he did it".[15] Roger Scruton described it as a "brilliant summary of story-telling".[16]

Views edit

Booker's weekly columns in The Sunday Telegraph covered a wide range of topics of public interest. He has been described by British columnist James Delingpole in The Spectator as doing "the kind of proper, old-school things that journalists hardly ever bother with in this new age of aggregation and flip bloggery: he digs, he makes the calls, he reads the small print, he takes up the cause of the little man and campaigns, he speaks truth to power without fear or favour".[17]

On a range of health issues, Booker put forward a view that the public is being unnecessarily "scared", as detailed in his book Scared to Death. Thus, he argues that asbestos, passive smoking[3] and BSE[18] have not been shown to be dangerous. His articles on global warming have been challenged by George Monbiot of The Guardian.[19]

Booker said that white asbestos is "chemically identical to talcum powder" and poses a "non-existent" risk to human health,[20] relying primarily on a 2000 paper for the Health and Safety Executive (HSE).[21] He wrote in January 2002 that "HSE studies, including a paper by John Hodgson and Andrew Darnton in 2000, concluded that the risk from the substance is "virtually zero". In response, the HSE's Director General, Timothy Walker, wrote that Booker's articles on asbestos had been "misinformed and do little to increase public understanding of a very important occupational health issue."[22] The HSE issued further rebuttals to articles written by Booker in both 2005[23][24] and in 2006.[25]

In an article in May 2008, Booker again cited the Hodgson and Darnton paper, claiming that 'they concluded that the risk of contracting mesothelioma from white asbestos cement was "insignificant", while that of lung cancer was "zero"'.[26] This article was also criticised by the HSE as "substantially misleading", as well as by George Monbiot, who argued that Booker misrepresented the authors' findings.[27] Booker's claims were also critically analysed by Richard Wilson in his book Don't Get Fooled Again (2008). Wilson highlighted Booker's repeated endorsement of the alleged scientific expertise of John Bridle, who in 2004 was convicted under the UK's Trade Descriptions Act of making false claims about his qualifications.[28]

Global warming edit

Booker said that the Climate Change Act 2008 was "the most expensive piece of legislation ever put through Parliament", and likely to cost hundreds of billions over the next 40 years.[29] In May 2009, Booker spoke at an International Conference on Climate Change organised by The Heartland Institute.[30] In the autumn of 2009, he published The Real Global Warming Disaster. The book, which became his best-selling work, claims that there is not actually a consensus on climate change, and postulates that the measures taken by governments to combat climate change "will turn out to be one of the most expensive, destructive, and foolish mistakes the human race has ever made".[31] The book was characterised by Philip Ball in The Observer as being as "the definitive climate sceptics' manual", in which "he has rounded up just about every criticism ever made of the majority scientific view that global warming, most probably caused by human activity, is under way, and presented them unchallenged".[32]

Ball said that Booker's position required the reader to believe that "1) Most of the world's climate scientists, for reasons unspecified, decided to create a myth about human-induced global warming and have managed to twist endless measurements and computer models to fit their case, without the rest of the scientific community noticing. George W Bush and certain oil companies have, however, seen through the deception. 2) Most of the world's climate scientists are incompetent and have grossly misinterpreted their data and models, yet their faulty conclusions are not, as you might imagine, a random chaos of assertions, but all point in the same direction."[32]

In December 2009, Christopher Booker and Richard North had published an article in The Sunday Telegraph in which they questioned whether Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), was using his position for personal gain,[33][34][35] with a follow-up Telegraph article in January 2010.[36] On 21 August 2010, The Daily Telegraph issued an apology,[34] and withdrew the December article from their website[35] having reportedly paid legal fees running into six figures.[35] Pachauri described the statements against him as "another attempt by the climate sceptics to discredit the IPCC."[37]

Family courts edit

Booker wrote a number of articles raising concerns about the Family Court system in England and Wales. Booker championed the cause of Victoria Haigh, bringing him into further conflict with the judiciary.[38][39] Booker also championed the cause of Marie Black, who fled the UK with her partner and daughter in order to evade social services.[40]

Death edit

Booker died on 3 July 2019.[41][42][43] On 12 July he was featured in the BBC Radio 4 obituary programme Last Word.[44]

Bibliography edit

  • The Neophiliacs: A Study of the Revolution in English Life in the Fifties and Sixties (1969).
  • Goodbye London (with Candida Lycett Green) (1979).
  • The Seventies: Portrait Of A Decade (1980).
  • The Games War: A Moscow Journal (1981).
  • The Mad Officials: How The Bureaucrats Are Strangling Britain (with Richard North, 1994).
  • The Castle of Lies: Why Britain Must get Out of Europe (with Richard North, 1996).ISBN 0715626930
  • A Looking-Glass Tragedy. The Controversy Over The Repatriations From Austria in 1945, London, United Kingdom, Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd, First Edition (1997).
  • The Great Deception (with Richard North, 2003), London: Continuum Publishing.
  • The Seven Basic Plots: Why We Tell Stories (2004).
  • Scared To Death: From BSE To Global Warming, Why Scares Are Costing Us The Earth (with Richard North, 2007), London: Continuum. ISBN 0-8264-8614-2.
  • Climategate to Cancun: The Real Global Warming Disaster Continues... (with Richard North, 2010), London: Continuum.
  • Booker, Christopher (2009). The Real Global Warming Disaster. Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd. ISBN 978-1-4411-1052-7.
  • Groupthink: A Study in Self Delusion ( 2020), London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 1472959051.

References edit

  1. ^ International Who's Who of Authors and Writers 2004, Routledge, 2003. p63
  2. ^ Private Eye founder dies at 81 Published by The Shropshire Star on 6 July 2019, retrieved on 12 July 2019
  3. ^ a b "scientific evidence to support [the] belief that inhaling other people's smoke causes cancer simply does not exist" – Christopher Booker, 1 July 2007, Sunday Telegraph,
  4. ^ Asbestos saga proves our feeble press watchdog has no bark and no bite Published by The Guardian on 28 September 2010, retrieved on 12 July 2019
  5. ^ Booker, Christopher (15 October 2006). "Christopher Booker's Notebook". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  6. ^ Booker, Christopher (18 January 2014). "Child protection services: A mother's diary records the awful death of a child 'in care'". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
  7. ^ Tunkrová, Lucie (Winter 2006). Karlas, Jan (ed.). "The Great Deception. The Secret History of the European Union (Skryté dějiny evropské integrace od roku 1918 do současnosti) by Christopher Booker, Richard North". Perspectives: The Central European Review of International Affairs. Institute of International Relations, NGO (27): 122–124. eISSN 1803-4551. ISSN 1210-762X. JSTOR 23616067.
  8. ^ Richard, Spall, ed. (December 2005). "Book Review: The Great Deception: The Secret History of the European Union. By Christopher Booker and Richard North. (New York: Continuum, 2003. Pp. xiii, 474. $39.95.) University of Trenton Reviewed by Mark Gilbert". The Historian. 67 (4): 787–788. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.2005.00130.x. S2CID 218499735.
  9. ^ a b c Christopher Booker obituary Published by The Guardian on 4 July 2019, retrieved on 12 July 2019
  10. ^ "BOOKER, Christopher John Penrice". Who's Who. Vol. 2019 (online ed.). A & C Black. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  11. ^ Christopher Booker, Private Eye's first editor, dies at 81 Published by Chortle and retrieved on 12 July 2019
  12. ^ a b Tobitt, Charlotte (3 July 2019). "Private Eye founding editor and Telegraph columnist Christopher Booker dies aged 81". Press Gazette. Retrieved 3 July 2019.
  13. ^ "Christopher Booker obituary". The Times. 4 July 2019. Retrieved 4 July 2019. (subscription required)
  14. ^ Adam Mars-Jones "Terminator 2 Good, The Odyssey Bad", The Observer, 21 November 2004, retrieved 1 September 2011.
  15. ^ . Bloomsbury. Archived from the original on 9 September 2017. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
  16. ^ Scruton, Roger (February 2005). "Wagner: moralist or monster?". The New Criterion. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
  17. ^ James Delingpole (28 October 2009). . The Spectator. Archived from the original on 11 November 2009. Retrieved 4 April 2010.
  18. ^ Ministers hushed up report on the dangers of sheep dip Published by Daily Telegraph on 10 March 2002, written by Christopher Booker, retrieved on 11 July 2019
  19. ^ Monbiot, George (3 February 2009). "Booker's work of clanger-dropping fiction". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
  20. ^ "Christopher Booker's Notebook Billions to be spent on nonexistent risk". The Daily Telegraph. London. 13 January 2002. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
  21. ^ Hodgson JT, Darnton A (December 2000). "The quantitative risks of mesothelioma and lung cancer in relation to asbestos exposure". Ann Occup Hyg. 44 (8): 565–601. doi:10.1093/annhyg/44.8.565. PMID 11108782. At exposure levels seen in occupational cohorts it is concluded that the exposure specific risk of mesothelioma from the three principal commercial asbestos types is broadly in the ratio 1:100:500 for chrysotile, amosite and crocidolite respectively. For lung cancer the conclusions are less clear cut. ... The risk differential between chrysotile and the two amphibole fibres for lung cancer is thus between 1:10 and 1:50.
  22. ^ Walker, Timothy (17 February 2002). "Booker's claims are irresponsible". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 1 April 2010.[dead link]
  23. ^ . Health and Safety Executive. 15 December 2005. Archived from the original on 5 November 2008. Retrieved 18 November 2008.
  24. ^ Booker, Christopher (11 December 2005). . The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 10 May 2008. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
  25. ^ "Christopher Booker's notebook". The Daily Telegraph. London. 6 August 2006. Archived from the original on 12 September 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
  26. ^ Christopher Booker (25 May 2008). "Farmers face £6bn bill for asbestos clean-up". Telegraph.co.uk.
  27. ^ Monbiot, George (23 September 2008). "The patron saint of charlatans is again spreading dangerous misinformation". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
  28. ^ Fox, Geoff (30 August 2005). "Asbestos expert lied about his qualifications". Yorkshire Evening Post. York. Retrieved 4 April 2010.
  29. ^ Christopher Booker (4 April 2010). "Climate Change Act has the biggest ever bill". The Sunday Telegraph. London. Retrieved 4 April 2010.
  30. ^ Monbiot, George (24 February 2012). "Environment: George Monbiot's Blog: Anything to declare, Mr Booker? We need transparency about Heartland". The Guardian. London.
  31. ^ Booker 2009, p. 342
  32. ^ a b Philip Ball (15 November 2009). "The Real Global Warming Disaster by Christopher Booker". The Observer. London. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  33. ^ Christopher Booker and Richard North , The Sunday Telegraph, 20 December 2009
  34. ^ a b Dr Pachauri – Apology, The Daily Telegraph, 21 August 2010
  35. ^ a b c George Monbiot "Rajendra Pachauri innocent of financial misdealings but smears will continue", The Guardian, 26 August 2010
  36. ^ Christopher Booker and Richard North , Sunday Telegraph, 17 January 2010
  37. ^ "Daily Telegraph apologises to Pachauri", Hindustan Times, 21 August 2010
  38. ^ Booker, Christopher (27 August 2011). "Judge Wall, the secrecy rules, and another stinging attack". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  39. ^ Booker, Christopher (4 May 2013). "A mother sent to prison on evidence she cannot see". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  40. ^ Another couple flee to France only to have their baby taken away Written by Christopher Booker, published by The Daily Telegraph on 9 November 2013, retrieved on 11 July 2019
  41. ^ Davies, Gareth (3 July 2019). "Former Telegraph and Private Eye journalist Christopher Booker dies aged 81". The Telegraph – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  42. ^ Bates, Stephen (4 July 2019). "Christopher Booker obituary". The Guardian – via www.theguardian.com.
  43. ^ "Christopher Booker obituary". 4 July 2019 – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
  44. ^ "Last Word - Eva Kor, Christopher Booker, João Gilberto, John McCririck - BBC Sounds". www.bbc.co.uk.

External links edit

  • Christopher Booker at telegraph.co.uk (subscription required)
Media offices
New title Editor of Private Eye
1961–1963
Succeeded by

christopher, booker, other, people, named, chris, booker, chris, booker, disambiguation, christopher, john, penrice, booker, october, 1937, july, 2019, english, journalist, author, founder, first, editor, satirical, magazine, private, 1961, from, 1990, onward,. For other people named Chris Booker see Chris Booker disambiguation Christopher John Penrice Booker 7 October 1937 3 July 2019 was an English journalist and author He was a founder and first editor of the satirical magazine Private Eye in 1961 From 1990 onward he was a columnist for The Sunday Telegraph 1 In 2009 he published The Real Global Warming Disaster He also disputed the link between passive smoking and cancer 2 3 and the dangers posed by asbestos 4 5 In his Sunday Telegraph section he frequently commented on the UK Family Courts and Social Services 6 In collaboration with Richard North Booker wrote a variety of publications advancing a Eurosceptic though academically disputed 7 8 popular historiography of the European Union The best known of these is The Great Deception Contents 1 Career 1 1 Early life 1 2 1960s 1 3 1970s 1 4 1980s 1 5 After 1990 2 Views 2 1 Global warming 3 Family courts 4 Death 5 Bibliography 6 References 7 External linksCareer editEarly life edit Booker was educated at Dragon School Shrewsbury School 9 and Corpus Christi College Cambridge where he read History 10 1960s edit With fellow Salopians Richard Ingrams and Willie Rushton he founded Private Eye in 1961 and was its first editor He was ousted by Ingrams in 1963 Returning in 1965 he remained a permanent member of the magazine s collaborative joke writing team thereafter with Ingrams Barry Fantoni and current editor Ian Hislop till his death 11 Booker began writing jazz reviews for The Daily Telegraph while at university 12 From 1961 to 1964 he wrote about jazz for The Sunday Telegraph as well His contributions included a positive account of a concert given by the pianist Erroll Garner which did not happen it was a late cancellation 13 In 1962 he became the resident political scriptwriter on the BBC satire show That Was The Week That Was notably contributing sketches on Home Secretary Henry Brooke and Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas Home which have often been cited as examples of the programme s outspoken style From 1964 he became a Spectator columnist writing on the press and TV and in 1969 published The Neophiliacs A Study of the Revolution in English Life in the Fifties and Sixties a highly critical analysis of the role played by fantasy in the political and social life of those decades He was married to the novelist Emma Tennant between 1963 and 1968 1970s edit He married Christine Verity his second wife in 1972 9 In the early 1970s Booker campaigned against both the building of tower blocks and the wholesale redevelopment of Britain s cities according to the ideology of the modernist movement In 1973 he published Goodbye London written with Candida Lycett Green and with Bennie Gray was the IPC Campaigning Journalist of the Year He made a documentary for the BBC in 1979 on modernist architecture called City of Towers In the mid 1970s he contributed a regular quiz to Melvyn Bragg s BBC literary programme Read All About It and he returned to The Spectator as a weekly contributor 1976 1981 when he also became a lead book reviewer for The Sunday Telegraph In 1979 he married Valerie Patrick his third wife with whom he had two sons they lived in Somerset 9 1980s edit In 1980 he published The Seventies Portrait Of A Decade and covered the Moscow Olympics for the Daily Mail publishing The Games War A Moscow Journal the following year Between 1987 and 1990 he wrote The Daily Telegraph s The Way of the World column a satirical column originated by Michael Wharton as Peter Simple II and in 1990 swapped places with Auberon Waugh after mocking Waugh who firmly requested he should write the column instead of Booker to become a weekly columnist on The Sunday Telegraph where he remained until March 2019 12 Between 1986 and 1990 he took part in a detailed investigation chaired by Brigadier Tony Cowgill of the charges that senior British politicians including Harold Macmillan had been guilty of a serious war crime in handing over thousands of Cossack and Yugoslav prisoners to the Communists at the end of the war in 1945 Their report published in 1990 presented those events in a very different light and Booker later published a lengthy analysis of the controversy in A Looking Glass Tragedy 1997 After 1990 edit From 1992 he focused more on the role played in British life by bureaucratic regulation and the European Union forming a professional collaboration with Richard North and they subsequently co authored a series of books including The Mad Officials How The Bureaucrats Are Strangling Britain 1994 The Castle of Lies 1996 The Great Deception 2003 a critical history of the European Union and Scared To Death From BSE To Global Warming Why Scares Are Costing Us The Earth 2007 a study of the part played in Western society in recent decades by the scare phenomenon In 2004 he published The Seven Basic Plots Why We Tell Stories a Jungian influenced analysis of stories and their psychological meaning on which he had been working for over 30 years The book was dismissed by Adam Mars Jones who objected to Booker employing his generalisations about conventional plot structures prescriptively He sets up criteria for art and ends up condemning Rigoletto The Cherry Orchard Wagner Proust Joyce Kafka and Lawrence the list goes on while praising Crocodile Dundee ET and Terminator 2 14 Fay Weldon wrote This is the most extraordinary exhilarating book It always seemed to me that the story was God s way of giving meaning to crude creation Booker now interprets the mind of God and analyses not just the novel which will never to me be quite the same again but puts the narrative of contemporary human affairs into a new perspective If it took its author a lifetime to write one can only feel gratitude that he did it 15 Roger Scruton described it as a brilliant summary of story telling 16 Views editBooker s weekly columns in The Sunday Telegraph covered a wide range of topics of public interest He has been described by British columnist James Delingpole in The Spectator as doing the kind of proper old school things that journalists hardly ever bother with in this new age of aggregation and flip bloggery he digs he makes the calls he reads the small print he takes up the cause of the little man and campaigns he speaks truth to power without fear or favour 17 On a range of health issues Booker put forward a view that the public is being unnecessarily scared as detailed in his book Scared to Death Thus he argues that asbestos passive smoking 3 and BSE 18 have not been shown to be dangerous His articles on global warming have been challenged by George Monbiot of The Guardian 19 Booker said that white asbestos is chemically identical to talcum powder and poses a non existent risk to human health 20 relying primarily on a 2000 paper for the Health and Safety Executive HSE 21 He wrote in January 2002 that HSE studies including a paper by John Hodgson and Andrew Darnton in 2000 concluded that the risk from the substance is virtually zero In response the HSE s Director General Timothy Walker wrote that Booker s articles on asbestos had been misinformed and do little to increase public understanding of a very important occupational health issue 22 The HSE issued further rebuttals to articles written by Booker in both 2005 23 24 and in 2006 25 In an article in May 2008 Booker again cited the Hodgson and Darnton paper claiming that they concluded that the risk of contracting mesothelioma from white asbestos cement was insignificant while that of lung cancer was zero 26 This article was also criticised by the HSE as substantially misleading as well as by George Monbiot who argued that Booker misrepresented the authors findings 27 Booker s claims were also critically analysed by Richard Wilson in his book Don t Get Fooled Again 2008 Wilson highlighted Booker s repeated endorsement of the alleged scientific expertise of John Bridle who in 2004 was convicted under the UK s Trade Descriptions Act of making false claims about his qualifications 28 Global warming edit Booker said that the Climate Change Act 2008 was the most expensive piece of legislation ever put through Parliament and likely to cost hundreds of billions over the next 40 years 29 In May 2009 Booker spoke at an International Conference on Climate Change organised by The Heartland Institute 30 In the autumn of 2009 he published The Real Global Warming Disaster The book which became his best selling work claims that there is not actually a consensus on climate change and postulates that the measures taken by governments to combat climate change will turn out to be one of the most expensive destructive and foolish mistakes the human race has ever made 31 The book was characterised by Philip Ball in The Observer as being as the definitive climate sceptics manual in which he has rounded up just about every criticism ever made of the majority scientific view that global warming most probably caused by human activity is under way and presented them unchallenged 32 Ball said that Booker s position required the reader to believe that 1 Most of the world s climate scientists for reasons unspecified decided to create a myth about human induced global warming and have managed to twist endless measurements and computer models to fit their case without the rest of the scientific community noticing George W Bush and certain oil companies have however seen through the deception 2 Most of the world s climate scientists are incompetent and have grossly misinterpreted their data and models yet their faulty conclusions are not as you might imagine a random chaos of assertions but all point in the same direction 32 In December 2009 Christopher Booker and Richard North had published an article in The Sunday Telegraph in which they questioned whether Rajendra Pachauri chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPCC was using his position for personal gain 33 34 35 with a follow up Telegraph article in January 2010 36 On 21 August 2010 The Daily Telegraph issued an apology 34 and withdrew the December article from their website 35 having reportedly paid legal fees running into six figures 35 Pachauri described the statements against him as another attempt by the climate sceptics to discredit the IPCC 37 Family courts editBooker wrote a number of articles raising concerns about the Family Court system in England and Wales Booker championed the cause of Victoria Haigh bringing him into further conflict with the judiciary 38 39 Booker also championed the cause of Marie Black who fled the UK with her partner and daughter in order to evade social services 40 Death editBooker died on 3 July 2019 41 42 43 On 12 July he was featured in the BBC Radio 4 obituary programme Last Word 44 Bibliography editThe Neophiliacs A Study of the Revolution in English Life in the Fifties and Sixties 1969 Goodbye London with Candida Lycett Green 1979 The Seventies Portrait Of A Decade 1980 The Games War A Moscow Journal 1981 The Mad Officials How The Bureaucrats Are Strangling Britain with Richard North 1994 The Castle of Lies Why Britain Must get Out of Europe with Richard North 1996 ISBN 0715626930 A Looking Glass Tragedy The Controversy Over The Repatriations From Austria in 1945 London United Kingdom Gerald Duckworth amp Co Ltd First Edition 1997 The Great Deception with Richard North 2003 London Continuum Publishing The Seven Basic Plots Why We Tell Stories 2004 Scared To Death From BSE To Global Warming Why Scares Are Costing Us The Earth with Richard North 2007 London Continuum ISBN 0 8264 8614 2 Climategate to Cancun The Real Global Warming Disaster Continues with Richard North 2010 London Continuum Booker Christopher 2009 The Real Global Warming Disaster Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd ISBN 978 1 4411 1052 7 Groupthink A Study in Self Delusion 2020 London Bloomsbury ISBN 1472959051 References edit International Who s Who of Authors and Writers 2004 Routledge 2003 p63 Private Eye founder dies at 81 Published by The Shropshire Star on 6 July 2019 retrieved on 12 July 2019 a b scientific evidence to support the belief that inhaling other people s smoke causes cancer simply does not exist Christopher Booker 1 July 2007 Sunday Telegraph Christopher Booker s notebook All done with passive smoke and mirrors Asbestos saga proves our feeble press watchdog has no bark and no bite Published by The Guardian on 28 September 2010 retrieved on 12 July 2019 Booker Christopher 15 October 2006 Christopher Booker s Notebook The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 12 April 2012 Booker Christopher 18 January 2014 Child protection services A mother s diary records the awful death of a child in care The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 19 September 2016 Tunkrova Lucie Winter 2006 Karlas Jan ed The Great Deception The Secret History of the European Union Skryte dejiny evropske integrace od roku 1918 do soucasnosti by Christopher Booker Richard North Perspectives The Central European Review of International Affairs Institute of International Relations NGO 27 122 124 eISSN 1803 4551 ISSN 1210 762X JSTOR 23616067 Richard Spall ed December 2005 Book Review The Great Deception The Secret History of the European Union By Christopher Booker and Richard North New York Continuum 2003 Pp xiii 474 39 95 University of Trenton Reviewed by Mark Gilbert The Historian 67 4 787 788 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6563 2005 00130 x S2CID 218499735 a b c Christopher Booker obituary Published by The Guardian on 4 July 2019 retrieved on 12 July 2019 BOOKER Christopher John Penrice Who s Who Vol 2019 online ed A amp C Black Subscription or UK public library membership required Christopher Booker Private Eye s first editor dies at 81 Published by Chortle and retrieved on 12 July 2019 a b Tobitt Charlotte 3 July 2019 Private Eye founding editor and Telegraph columnist Christopher Booker dies aged 81 Press Gazette Retrieved 3 July 2019 Christopher Booker obituary The Times 4 July 2019 Retrieved 4 July 2019 subscription required Adam Mars Jones Terminator 2 Good The Odyssey Bad The Observer 21 November 2004 retrieved 1 September 2011 The Seven Basic Plots Bloomsbury Archived from the original on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 19 March 2013 Scruton Roger February 2005 Wagner moralist or monster The New Criterion Retrieved 19 March 2013 James Delingpole 28 October 2009 You Know It Makes Sense The Spectator Archived from the original on 11 November 2009 Retrieved 4 April 2010 Ministers hushed up report on the dangers of sheep dip Published by Daily Telegraph on 10 March 2002 written by Christopher Booker retrieved on 11 July 2019 Monbiot George 3 February 2009 Booker s work of clanger dropping fiction The Guardian London Retrieved 1 April 2010 Christopher Booker s Notebook Billions to be spent on nonexistent risk The Daily Telegraph London 13 January 2002 Retrieved 1 April 2010 Hodgson JT Darnton A December 2000 The quantitative risks of mesothelioma and lung cancer in relation to asbestos exposure Ann Occup Hyg 44 8 565 601 doi 10 1093 annhyg 44 8 565 PMID 11108782 At exposure levels seen in occupational cohorts it is concluded that the exposure specific risk of mesothelioma from the three principal commercial asbestos types is broadly in the ratio 1 100 500 for chrysotile amosite and crocidolite respectively For lung cancer the conclusions are less clear cut The risk differential between chrysotile and the two amphibole fibres for lung cancer is thus between 1 10 and 1 50 Walker Timothy 17 February 2002 Booker s claims are irresponsible The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 1 April 2010 dead link HSE Press Office Putting the record straight Health and Safety Executive 15 December 2005 Archived from the original on 5 November 2008 Retrieved 18 November 2008 Booker Christopher 11 December 2005 Christopher Booker s notebook Fatal cracks appear in asbestos scam as HSE shifts its ground The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 10 May 2008 Retrieved 1 April 2010 Christopher Booker s notebook The Daily Telegraph London 6 August 2006 Archived from the original on 12 September 2012 Retrieved 1 April 2010 Christopher Booker 25 May 2008 Farmers face 6bn bill for asbestos clean up Telegraph co uk Monbiot George 23 September 2008 The patron saint of charlatans is again spreading dangerous misinformation The Guardian London Retrieved 1 April 2010 Fox Geoff 30 August 2005 Asbestos expert lied about his qualifications Yorkshire Evening Post York Retrieved 4 April 2010 Christopher Booker 4 April 2010 Climate Change Act has the biggest ever bill The Sunday Telegraph London Retrieved 4 April 2010 Monbiot George 24 February 2012 Environment George Monbiot s Blog Anything to declare Mr Booker We need transparency about Heartland The Guardian London Booker 2009 p 342 a b Philip Ball 15 November 2009 The Real Global Warming Disaster by Christopher Booker The Observer London Retrieved 9 January 2014 Christopher Booker and Richard North Questions over business deals of UN climate change guru Dr Rajendra Pachauri The Sunday Telegraph 20 December 2009 a b Dr Pachauri Apology The Daily Telegraph 21 August 2010 a b c George Monbiot Rajendra Pachauri innocent of financial misdealings but smears will continue The Guardian 26 August 2010 Christopher Booker and Richard North The curious case of the expanding environmental group with falling income Sunday Telegraph 17 January 2010 Daily Telegraph apologises to Pachauri Hindustan Times 21 August 2010 Booker Christopher 27 August 2011 Judge Wall the secrecy rules and another stinging attack The Daily Telegraph London Booker Christopher 4 May 2013 A mother sent to prison on evidence she cannot see The Daily Telegraph London Another couple flee to France only to have their baby taken away Written by Christopher Booker published by The Daily Telegraph on 9 November 2013 retrieved on 11 July 2019 Davies Gareth 3 July 2019 Former Telegraph and Private Eye journalist Christopher Booker dies aged 81 The Telegraph via www telegraph co uk Bates Stephen 4 July 2019 Christopher Booker obituary The Guardian via www theguardian com Christopher Booker obituary 4 July 2019 via www thetimes co uk Last Word Eva Kor Christopher Booker Joao Gilberto John McCririck BBC Sounds www bbc co uk External links editChristopher Booker at telegraph co uk subscription required Media officesNew title Editor of Private Eye1961 1963 Succeeded byRichard Ingrams Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christopher Booker amp oldid 1200724845, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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