Corridors of Power (novel)
Corridors of Power is the ninth book in C. P. Snow's Strangers and Brothers series. Its title had become a household phrase referring to the centres of government and power after Snow coined it in his earlier novel, Homecomings. (A slightly rueful Foreword to Corridors of Power expresses the hope that he is at least entitled to use his own cliché.)
Author | Charles Percy Snow |
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Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Series | Strangers and Brothers |
Publication date | 1964 |
Media type | |
Preceded by | The Affair |
Followed by | The Sleep of Reason |
Plot synopsis
Corridors of Power is concerned with the attempts of an English MP to influence the country's policy on nuclear weapons in the 1950s. The central character is Roger Quaife, an ambitious politician and Cabinet Minister. He is widely attacked on his stand on Britain's position in the thermonuclear arms race; at the same time his affair with another woman leads to potential blackmail.
Reception
In a 1964 book review in Kirkus Reviews called the book "a sound reading of the political, moral, ideological temper of the times; a substantial achievement even though one in which intellect has been asserted at the expense of imagination."[2]
Dramatic versions
In the BBC's 1984 television serialisation of Strangers and Brothers, Shaughan Seymour played Lewis Eliot and Anthony Hopkins played Roger Quaife.
References
- Nolan's Covers - aComment Retrieved on 2015-12-12.
- "Corridors of Power". Kirkus Reviews. 14 September 1964.