- Published: 22 October 2020
- ISBN: 9780753557723
- Imprint: Virgin Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 240
How Not To Be Wrong
The Art of Changing Your Mind
- Published: 22 October 2020
- ISBN: 9780753557723
- Imprint: Virgin Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 240
Disarmingly honest about where he has been wrong, this book is a refreshing reminder of our ability to change our minds
Susanna Reid
Blending profound self-reflection with genuine warmth... the perfect book for a loud world that seems more divided than ever
John Amaechi OBE
The conscience of liberal Britain
New Statesman
I know few broadcasters as consistently, forensically, brilliant as James O'Brien
Emily Maitlis
Such verbal ability seems like a superpower
The Times
Classic James O'Brien - smart, analytical, self-aware and important to public debate at a time the toffs in power are taking it into the sewer
Alastair Campbell
James is more right than ever -- particularly in our entrenched, binary thinking culture -- about the importance of being able to admit to being wrong
David Baddiel
An admirably personal guide to the lost art of changing your mind. James showed me how often a change of mind is really a change of heart
Marina Hyde
Simply brilliant ... Its calm but brutal honesty makes for compelling reading. This book is needed now more than ever
The Secret Barrister
Highly personal and confessional, yet also a passionate and brilliantly argued appeal against the dangerous tribalism of our times
David Olusoga
An exceptional broadcaster with a peerless ability to calmly point out the absurdity of certain viewpoints
Guardian
A model of lucidity, humour and humanity - we should be thankful that we have him
Times Literary Supplement
Far and away the best thing he has ever written -- indeed, a kind of deconstruction of everything he has written and said, or at least propounded. A series of reflections on various topical themes that doubles as a memoir, almost a mea culpa, about the psychological origin of his opinions, and of the force and certitude with which he used to wield them.
New Statesman Book of the Year