Thank you for visiting my web site - it's meant to both share my experiences and to promote debate about European reform so any comments would be very welcome
Mike Burnett
About me
I'm a UK chartered accountant, born in Staffordshire and educated at Cannock Grammar School and Warwick University. After many years experience as a practitioner in public procurement and public-private partnerships in Europe, I'm now directing international training programmes in PPP based in Maastricht, the Netherlands.
The books and films I've mentioned are about things which matter to me - history, Africa, cricket, people caught up in massive social change, making Europe - our continent - work for us, using my business and political experience to help others
Books I've enjoyed recently...
"On the beach" - Neville Shute (his gripping cold war novel about the last survivors on the planet - in Melbourne - of a nuclear exchange in the Northern hemisphere. One of the few books which, once started, you really can't put down. The film version - more soap opera than a real challenge to complacency - lacks the same sense of impending doom)
"The road to serfdom" - Friedrich Hayek (deserves a periodic re-read to remind us that in a totalitarian societies the tyranny is the point of everything, not just an unfortunate by-product)
"People like us - Misrepresenting the Middle East" - Joris Luyendijk (A Dutch journalist's reflections on five years in the Middle East - reminding us that "Syria is not a country with an army but an army with a country"
"Occupational hazards" - Rory Stewart MP (the on the ground story of his time as a Deputy Provincial Governor in post-Saddam Iraq)
"The end of the Party" - Andrew Rawnsley (the definitive word on the catastrophe of New Labour)
"Off message" - Bob Marshall-Andrews (memoirs - you don't have to agree with everything he says to enjoy this book)
"Elizabeth's spymaster" - Robert Hutchinson (the life of Sir Francis Walsingham and the dilemmas of keeping England safe from domestic and foreign threat)
"When a crocodile eats the sun" - Peter Godwin (a personal family account of the unfolding tragedy in Zimbabwe)
"Spin" - Martin Sixsmith (a novel(?) about New Labour)
"The shadow of the sun" (wise perspectives on Africa from the late Polish foreign correspondent Ryszard Kapuscinski)
"Out of my comfort zone" - Steve Waugh's autobiography (as good a book on management and career management as I've read for a long time)
"Fantasy Island" - Larry Elliott and Dan Atkinson (on Tony Blair's legacy and the UK's unbalanced economy)
"Murder in Amsterdam" - Ian Buruma (on the murder of Dutch film director Theo Van Gogh)
Must see...
"Tinker,Tailor,Soldier,Spy" ("Spooks" 1970s style, though I can' t see Sir Harry swimming in the lake in Hyde Park....)
"Dr Strangelove" (needs no introduction as the classic Cold War black comedy)
Any episode of "Spooks" (essential viewing for anyone in public decision making)
"Hotel Rwanda" (a reminder that genocide has touched recent history)
"The lives of others" (a reminder of what the Stasi were like - a counterweight to the (also outstanding) "Goodbye Lenin")