Tom Bower Popular Books

Tom Bower Biography & Facts

Thomas Michael Bower (born 28 September 1946) is a British writer and former BBC journalist and television producer. He is known for his investigative journalism and for his unauthorised biographies, often of business tycoons and newspaper proprietors. His books include unauthorised biographies of Robert Maxwell, Mohamed Al-Fayed, Conrad Black, Richard Branson, Jeremy Corbyn and Boris Johnson. A book about Richard Desmond remains unpublished. His book, Broken Dreams: Vanity, Greed and the Souring of British Football, won the 2003 William Hill Sports Book of the Year. Early life Bower was born in London in 1946. His parents were Jewish refugees who fled Prague after the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in March 1939 and arrived in London later that same year. They married in London in early 1943. From 1948, Tom's father Jiri Gerhard Bauer renounced the use of the surname Bauer for the family, and called himself George Gerald Bower, a change he confirmed by deed poll on 15 May 1957. After attending the William Ellis School in Highgate, Bower studied law at the London School of Economics, before working as a barrister for the National Council of Civil Liberties. Bower says that during this period he was a Marxist, being nicknamed "Tommy the Red". BBC career In 1970, Bower joined the BBC as a researcher on the programme 24 Hours before becoming a reporter on Panorama. He was a producer on Panorama from 1975 until 1987. He left the BBC in 1995. Books and journalism Bower's first book was Blind Eye to Murder (1980), the first exposé based on eyewitnesses and newly released archives in London and Washington of the Allied failure after 1945 to hunt down Nazi war criminals and de-Nazify West Germany. The book was serialised in The Times and was the basis of a BBC TV documentary. Bower's second book was Klaus Barbie: The Butcher of Lyon (1984) which documented Klaus Barbie's war crimes during World War II as head of the Gestapo in Lyon, France and his postwar work for the American intelligence agency Counterintelligence Corps (CIC) and South American narcotics and arms dealers. Bower's book was serialised in The Times in September 1983. Neal Ascherson positively reviewed the book in The Observer in January 1984. Robert Maxwell In 1987, Robert Maxwell responded to the publication of two unauthorised biographies of himself with numerous lawsuits, threats of legal action against individual booksellers, and the rapid publication of an authorised biography by Joe Haines, political editor of the Mirror Group which Maxwell owned. Of the two unauthorised books, Maxwell: A Portrait of Power by Peter Thompson and Anthony Delano was withdrawn from sale and all unsold copies pulped after Maxwell successfully sued the publishers and authors for libel. The second book, Maxwell: The Outsider by Bower sold out in hardback but Maxwell prevented the paperback edition appearing, in part by buying the publishing company which held the paperback rights. Maxwell also filed a libel action against Bower and the hardback publishers, Aurum Press. Maxwell allowed this action to lapse in 1990 but only after Bower and Aurum had submitted a detailed defence of the book. Maxwell also tried to sue Bower in the English courts over an article published in America, by the magazine The New Republic, on the basis that it had 136 British subscribers. Bower also believes that Maxwell tried to break into his house and also went through his phone records and bank statements. Tiny Rowland In 1993 Bower published a biography of Lonrho tycoon Tiny Rowland, entitled Tiny Rowland. A Rebel Tycoon (London, Heinemann, 1993). Swiss Banks In 1997, Tom Bower published Blood Money: The Swiss, the Nazis and the Looted Billions detailing his thesis of how the Swiss Government and the Swiss Banks colluded to prevent the return of Jewish-owned World War II-era bank accounts to their rightful owners until the World Jewish Congress filed suit in 1995. In his testimony to the United States Senate Banking Committee in May 1997, Bower accused the Swiss government of “delay, deception and dishonesty” in the retrieval of Jewish-owned funds and stated that he had “grave doubts” whether the Bergier commission which was being set up, to investigate Switzerland’s WWII conduct, would “provide an acceptable account”. Regarding his testimony and book, Bower was criticized by some commentators for predominantly relying on, and rehashing, information from the Swiss Federal Archives that had already been made public by Swiss historians and others. One such example regarded a ‘secret’ Swiss treaty with Poland which The New York Times had covered in 1949 and which the historian Peter Hug (together with Marc Perrenoud) had produced a report on, in 1996, for the Swiss government. Jacques Picard, a Swiss historian, had published work in 1993 covering the 1957 information request to the Swiss government by Harald Huber, a member of parliament, regarding the suspected existence of dormant accounts in Switzerland. In his testimony, Bower presented the findings regarding Huber as if they were novel, adding that “Among the Swiss lines of defense is that there is nothing new in [Bower’s] allegations. Were that to be true - that would be shocking. It would mean that Swiss historians have known for many years about the deception but have refused to publicize deprecatory information”. Richard Branson In 2000, Richard Branson sued Bower for libel over an article he had written for the London Evening Standard in 1999. Branson chose not to sue the paper, but its editor, Max Hastings, agreed the newspaper would fund Bower's defence. Branson lost the case, and later expressed regret at bringing the action. Bower continues to write articles critical of Branson's business affairs, and published biographies of him in 2000 and 2014. Geoffrey Robinson MP In 2001, Bower published The Paymaster: Geoffrey Robinson, Maxwell and New Labour, a biography of the Labour MP Geoffrey Robinson. The book's evidence that Robinson had solicited a £200,000 business contract from Robert Maxwell led to Robinson being suspended from Parliament for three weeks as he had not disclosed the matter to an inquiry some years previously. Robinson denied receiving the money in question from Maxwell and denied that he had sought to mislead Parliament. English football In 2003, Bower won the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award for Broken Dreams: Vanity, Greed and the Souring of British Football, an investigation into corruption in English football. Conrad Black Bower's joint biography of Conrad Black and Barbara Amiel Conrad and Lady Black: Dancing on the Edge was published in November 2006. In February 2007, Black filed a libel suit in Toronto against Bower over the contents of the book. The suit was frozen when Black was convicted of fraud and imprisoned. Richard Desmond The Daily Express proprietor Richard Desmond brought a libel action against Bower over a passing refer.... Discover the Tom Bower popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Tom Bower books.

Best Seller Tom Bower Books of 2024

  • Out of the Desert synopsis, comments

    Out of the Desert

    Ali Al-Naimi

    The extraordinary memoir of global oil's former central bankerAli AlNaimi is the former Saudi oil minister and OPEC kingpin a position he held for the two decades between August ...

  • Driven synopsis, comments

    Driven

    Kevin Eason

    Formula One is speed, glamour, danger and eyewatering wealth. Driven: The Men Who Made Formula One tells how a small group of extraordinary men transformed Formula One from a nich...

  • Damaged Goods synopsis, comments

    Damaged Goods

    Oliver Shah

    DISCOVER THE SHOCKING TRUTH BEHIND THE BUSINESS AND LIFESTYLE OF SIR PHILIP GREEN 'Superb' Evening Standard'From the glitzy parties to the threatening phone calls, the largerthanli...

  • One Party After Another synopsis, comments

    One Party After Another

    Michael Crick

    'Enormously readable...excellent' Dominic Sandbrook, Sunday Times'A superb piece of thorough journalism' David Aaronovitch, The TimesNigel Farage is arguably one of the most influe...

  • Entitled synopsis, comments

    Entitled

    Chris Bryant

    "A proudly partisan history of the British aristocracy which scores some shrewd hits against the upper class themselves, and the nostalgia of the rest of us for their less endeari...

  • The House of Beckham synopsis, comments

    The House of Beckham

    Tom Bower

    For fans and watchers of the Beckham Netflix documentary who want the rest of the storyan explosive tellall account of the real lives of David and Victoria Beckham.As one...

  • A History of Scotland synopsis, comments

    A History of Scotland

    Bruce Lenman & J.L. Mackie

    A history that is equally entertaining and enlightening, illustrating all of the changes of power and intricacies that are necessary to understand the interrelation between England...

  • Sons And Lovers synopsis, comments

    Sons And Lovers

    D. H. Lawrence

    Sons and Lovers is the criticallyacclaimed story of Paul Morel, a second son who must discover his own identity in the shadow of his mother’s overwhelming presence and influence. A...

  • Headspace synopsis, comments

    Headspace

    Amber Marks

    Crime detection has gone to the dogs and squirrels are being busted for espionage. If you've never wondered about the new direction of 'intelligenceled policing' in our society, no...

  • Diaries Volume Three synopsis, comments

    Diaries Volume Three

    Alastair Campbell

    POWER AND RESPONSIBILITY is the third volume of Alastair Campbell's unique daily account of life at the centre of the Blair government. It begins amid conflict in Kosovo, and ends ...

  • The Glossy Years synopsis, comments

    The Glossy Years

    Nicholas Coleridge

    'The most entertaining book of the year' Sunday Times Diana touched your elbow, your arm, covered your hand with hers. It was alluring. And she was disarmingly confiding."Can I ask...

  • Dead Men Talking synopsis, comments

    Dead Men Talking

    Nicholas Davies

    Following the revelations of the secret conspiracy between British Military Intelligence and the gunmen of the Ulster Defence Association in TenThirtyThree, Nicholas Davies now dra...

  • Ask in Prayer synopsis, comments

    Ask in Prayer

    Tom Bowers

    Is Jesus the Christ? Is he my savior and redeemer? I resisted these questions and rebelled against the Methodist Church in high school. In college I followed Yogananda, an Indian g...

  • Diaries Volume Two synopsis, comments

    Diaries Volume Two

    Alastair Campbell

    Power & the People covers the first two years of the New Labour government, beginning with their landslide victory at the polls in 1997. This second voume of Campbell's unexpur...

  • Showtime synopsis, comments

    Showtime

    Pat Leahy

    In boom and in bust, Ireland has been led by Fianna Fáil. Showtime gets behind the party's remarkable dominance of the political landscape and leading political writer Pat Leahy, t...

  • Sons And Lovers synopsis, comments

    Sons And Lovers

    D. H. Lawrence

    Sons and Lovers is the criticallyacclaimed story of Paul Morel, a second son who must discover his own identity in the shadow of his mother’s overwhelming presence and influence. A...

  • The End Of An Era synopsis, comments

    The End Of An Era

    Tony Benn

    Tony Benn's final instalment of diaries centres on a decade which saw the disintegration of Eastern Europe, an unprecedented assault on the labour movement at home, the fall of...

  • The Great European Rip-off synopsis, comments

    The Great European Rip-off

    Dr. David Craig & Matthew Elliott

    In this EU referendum year, it's time for people across Europe to look at what really goes on in Brussels in our name. It has been estimated that the EU costs us around £1,000 bill...

  • Out Of The Wilderness synopsis, comments

    Out Of The Wilderness

    Tony Benn

    1963 saw Labour's emergence from its 'wilderness years' in Opposition, and the election of Harold Wilson following the unexpected death of Hugh Gaitskell. In the first Wilson gover...

  • My Sporting Heroes synopsis, comments

    My Sporting Heroes

    Sir Ian Botham

    In My Sporting Heroes, one of the country's great sportsmen, Sir Ian Botham, draws up his template of what he believes makes a true sporting hero.Botham singles out the ten qualiti...

  • Antisemitism synopsis, comments

    Antisemitism

    Julia Neuberger

    Antisemitism has been on the rise in recent years, with violent attacks, increased verbal insults, and an acceptability in some circles of what would hitherto have been condemned a...

  • How To Stay Married synopsis, comments

    How To Stay Married

    Jilly Cooper OBE

    When Jilly Cooper, then a young Sunday Times journalist, was asked to write a book on marriage, she had been married to Leo Cooper for a mere seven years. Now they are celebrating ...

  • Selected Writings synopsis, comments

    Selected Writings

    Gerard De Nerval

    Poet, visionary, shortstory writer and autobiographer, Gérard de Nerval (18081855) explored the uncertain borderlines between dream and reality, irony and madness, autobiography an...