A former New Zealand prime minister candidly reviews his life and the state of the nation. A self-taught son of Irish immigrants, devout Catholic, rough-hewn King Country farmer and farming lobbyist, Jim Bolger entered New Zealand political life in the 1970s. He was a flinty Minister of Labour under Robert Muldoon and Prime Minister from 1990 to 1997. As ambassador to Washington, he helped create warmer relations with the United States. In recent years, he has chaired boards, served as the chancellor of the University of Waikato and marked more than a half-century of marriage to Joan, with whom he has nine children. Never given to orthodoxies, yet staunchly National in his politics, in his still-energetic eighties he remains an impressively brisk progressive thinker. For six months he regularly sat down on Fridays with the writer David Cohen to reflect on his life and times, our nation and world. Fridays with Jim reveals a quintessential man of the old New Zealand who is fully in synch with the new New Zealand, and with plenty of ideas about where its all heading.
David Cohen is an author and journalist. His work appears regularly in New Zealand and abroad, including commentary and reportage for The Spectator, Arab News and Radio New Zealand. For many years he wrote about higher education for the Guardian and local political affairs for The Christian Science Monitor. As a reporter, he has interviewed many political leaders, including several New Zealand premiers, the former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir bin Mohamad and the first East Timorese president, Xanana Gusmão. He is the author of six books, including works of social history, family memoir and music criticism, the last being Book of Cohen, a collection of late-night essays about the Canadian artist Leonard Cohen. He has co-authored or contributed chapters to several others. An influential earlier title, Little Criminals, was named one of the best books of the year by the New Zealand Listener. He lives in Wellington.