20.09.10 - Benedicte Page - The Bookseller
Bloomsbury is launching its history of the secret intelligence service, Keith Jeffery's M16, tomorrow (21st), as the book trade's high-profile start to the autumn looks set to continue.
A three-part serialisation of the heavily embargoed title commenced in the Times this weekend (Saturday 18th). Jeffery will be interviewed on BBC Radio 4's "Today" programme on Tuesday, before a full press conference to be attended by over 100 journalists and camera crews from 15 countries. Pre-recorded TV packages on the book will go out on breakfast, lunchtime and evening TV news programmes and Jeffery will write op-ed articles and give interviews.
M16: The History of the Secret Intelligence Service 1909-1949 is described as an "unprecedented" study of the best-known intelligence organisation in the world. Jeffery, professor of British History at Queen's University, Belfast, had "full and unrestricted" access to MI6's closed archives. The campaign closely resembles that for Christopher Andrew's successful history of M15, published by Penguin last year.
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