The first book to be written in the Round Building was William Morris (1994), a biography that took equally seriously its subject's designs, writing and socialism. MacCarthy regards him as a "time traveller", still with us not only thanks to his wallpaper but his politics and environmentalism. News from Nowhere became "a kind of handbook for the romantic-intellectual English socialism that has only just ended with the death of Michael Foot". She was, however, "never convinced by Tony Blair pointing out how News from Nowhere was one of his favourite books: there's simply no meeting point between Blair and Morris the anti-parliamentarian, who wanted to turn the Houses of Parliament into a dung-house." At the end of a new edition of the biography, she asks how Morris would react to celebrity worship, parliamentary sleaze, bankers' bonuses, body enhancements, air kissing and numerous other modern horrors, in a long list that ends with "mass descent into illusion and banality". MacCarthy answers: "'Damn'd pigs! Damn'd fools!' You can hear Morris expostulate," and it's clear she is cheering him on.
Paul Laity
The Guardian
