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Never Learn to Type: A Woman at the United Nations
 
 
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Never Learn to Type: A Woman at the United Nations [Paperback]

Margaret Joan Anstee (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 28, 2004
A fascinating account of a remarkable life that took the author, through hard work and determination, from rural England to the highest ranks of the United Nations

Dame Margaret Anstee was born in the 1920s to a poor family in rural Essex. With the support of her parents and through her own determination, she graduated from Cambridge with first class honours, and entered the Foreign Office where she worked with the spy Donald Maclean shortly before his defection with Guy Burgess.

Her career here ended as was customary at the time, when she married a diplomat and was posted to Singapore. As the marriage began to fail Margaret accepted a job at the United Nations in order to earn her fare back to England.

It was the start of a career that was to push the boundaries at every step. She became the first woman to be posted to her beloved South America, where she drove through the Andes in her VW Beetle, she headed up the first Government think tank during Harold Wilson’s Government and she was the first woman to break the glass ceiling at the United Nations.

Dame Margaret Anstee served the United Nations for four decades, both at the New York Headquarters and in some of the poorest countries of the world attempting to help the victims of war, poverty and natural disasters. Throughout this time Dame Margaret has worked relentlessly to overcome the inequalities between the developed and developing world, a battle that she considers essential for the survival of both worlds.

  •  The first and only woman ever to reach this powerful position within the United Nations.
  • Exciting, insightful and, on occasion humorous, travel writing as the author journeys through South America, Africa and the Far East.
  • Charming account of village life and that of a young academic in Cambridge in the 1930s and 1940s.
  • Gives an insight into the workings of the United Nations and the challenges faced both in conflict resolution and health and education programs.
  • Features lively and amusing anecdotes with a cast of characters that includes many of the world’s leaders, from Che Guevara to Margaret Thatcher as well as special appearances by MI6 and the CIA, set against a global backdrop.

Praise for Never Learn to Type:

‘Her achievements are truly inspirational.’ 
The Rt Hon. Jack Straw MP, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs

‘The preamble of the UN Charter announces the commitment...to...“reaffirm the faith in the fundamental dignity and worth of the human person.”...No one has lived for these principles more selflessly or diligently than Margaret Anstee. Her life...is inspirational, and her story is highly recommended.’
Jimmy Carter, Former President of the United States of America (awarded Nobel Peace Prize in 2002)

'...a true pioneer of the international community... an account of a rich and fascinating life, as well as the kind of insight only the insider can provide into the nature of conflict, development and the work for peace.’
Kofi A. Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations

‘...a remarkable and entertaining account of her adventures in many parts of the world.’
Boutros Boutros-Ghali, Former Secretary-General of the United Nations

‘...she became, with all my support and pleasure, the first woman Under Secretary-General.’
Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, Former Secretary-General of the United Nations

An extraordinary book about an extraordinary life. ...A story written with wit, charm and affection. ...Thank God she never learned to type but learned to think and care!
Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada, President of Bolivia

‘A truly absorbing account of achievement and adventure, by a remarkable woman...she engages and holds the reader’s attention from beginning to end.’
The Rt Hon. The Lord Howe of Aberavon CH QC

‘Anyone who doubts the usefulness of the UN should read her book.’
The Rt Hon. Lord Hurd of Westwell CH CBE PC

‘...a witness to many of the momentous events that shaped the last 50 years. ...this is a writer who sets off up rivers, into the plains, mountains and deserts to get to the heart of a country. ...a remarkable story told by a remarkable lady.’
Rt Hon. Peter Hain MP, Secretary of State for Wales

‘...she also writes of romance and travel, friendship and daily incident - even about making herself a ball-gown out of a parachute and dancing the night away.’
Onora O’Neill, Principal, Newnham College Cambridge

Hard Talk - with Dame Margaret Anstee

On the practicality of the United Nations:
“The UN is always judged on political grounds, where compromise is inescapable.  Critics invariably forget the myriad practical achievements in the economic, social and humanitarian fields that benefit millions of human beings.”

On the future role of the UN:
“As Adlai Stevenson said, “If it didn’t exist, it would have to be invented.”  The role of the UN in nurturing peace and international cooperation and bringing about better conditions of living for the deprived of the world is essential for security in its broadest sense (human security).  But a sea-change in the policies of member states is needed which peoples everywhere should urge on their governments.”

On the role Britain should play in global politics and the war against terrorism:
“Britain should play a major and statesmanlike role of promotion of firm but balanced international policies, using its long experience to moderate and mediate between extreme positions.”

On Bush:
“Successive U.S. administrations have traditionally been ambivalent towards the UN.  At the outset of a new century it is troubling to see this attitude personified and expanded by a President who seems to regard the UN as a fig leaf to be resorted to only when expedient.”

On Blair:
“Blair has played a crucial role in persuading Bush and his administration to use the path of the UN and international consensus over Iraq rather than unilateral action – so far.  I hope that he will continue to pursue this difficult political juggling act.”

On the position Hans Blix finds himself in:
“I empathise with Hans.  Any international civil servant responsible for decisions that can cost human lives is in an invidious position, as I experienced in Angola.  In this case the stakes are even higher – the risk of war with incalculable consequences.”

On her most significant role model:
“My mother, who never let anyone deter her (or me) with her dictum “never say your mother had a jibber”.  And my aunt Christina who showed you could demonstrate professional competence in a man’s world without sacrificing femininity.”

On today’s youth:
“They have many more advantages and opportunities but also many daunting challenges in an increasingly globalised world.  In rising to these one hopes they will not discard the lessons of the past.”

On the event that had the greatest impact on the course of her life:
“My mother, putting on her best suit and hat in 1936, taking the bus into the country town and button-holing the Country Education Officer (without prior appointment) to ensure her sick daughter (who’d missed the examination date) could have another opportunity to sit the scholarship examination – without that there’d have been no high school or university.”


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"…continues to leave her audiences breathless with intrigue." (Mid Wales Journal, August 2006)

Review

‘What a life! She strode - and occasionally stumbled - across Development, the UN and the men in her life with a style, intelligence and curiosity reminiscent of those extraordinary Victorian women explorers. With a brief detour to Harold Wilson’s Downing Street, her career was spent as Advisor and UN Representative in some of the world’s most exotic, difficult and dangerous places. She is one of those redoubtable Englishwomen for whom England was always a size too small.’ Mark Malloch Brown, Administrator, United Nations Development Programme

‘As a leading international civil servant, Margaret Anstee has lived with the great themes of post-war history: poverty, conflict and the unending difficulty of limiting either. But she also writes of romance and travel, friendship and daily incident - even about making herself a ball-gown out of a parachute and dancing the night away.’ Onora O’Neill, Principal, Newnham College, Cambridge

‘An intelligent and courageous human being, Dame Margaret Anstee is also a wonderful writer. She vividly presents for us the adventures she has experienced, the battles she has won and lost and the fascinating people she has encountered along the way.' Gerald J. Bender, Professor (and former Director), School of International Relations, University of Southern California, and former President of the African Studies Association

‘The preamble of the UN Charter announces the commitment of the Peoples of the United Nations to, among other things, "reaffirm the faith in the fundamental dignity and worth of the human person" and "promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom". No one has lived for these principles more selflessly or diligently than Margaret Anstee. Her life of service to the global community is inspirational, and her story is highly recommended to anyone interested in the remarkable development of the UN since 1945.’ Jimmy Carter, former President of the United States of America

‘Margaret Joan Anstee is a true pioneer of the international community. Her career spans more than half a century’s service across four continents. The first woman to be appointed Special Representative of the Secretary-General of the United Nations, she has made an enormous and enduring contribution to the UN family – and continues to do so to this day. With this memoir, she offers an account of a rich and fascinating life, as well as the kind of insight only the insider can provide into the nature of conflict, development and the work for peace.’ Kofi A. Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations

‘Margaret Anstee’s memoir provides insight into the problems women face in the man’s world of the United Nations. Yet the real world is at least half a woman’s world. Women, as she says, have a great deal to contribute.’ Rt Hon. Shirley Williams, leader of the Liberal Democrats in the House of Lords

‘To succeed as a woman in the upper reaches of the UN you need to be intelligent and rather stubborn. As Foreign Secretary I knew that [Margaret] Joan Anstee was both. I could guess at the difficulties with which she wrestled in the labyrinth of UN Headquarters and later as she struggled on behalf of us all to bring peace to Angola. But until I read this dramatic book I had no notion of the earlier struggles which brought her from a village green in Essex through Cambridge, the Foreign Office, the Labour Party and Downing Street, to the centre of international life in the UN. Anyone who doubts the usefulness of the UN should read her book – as should anyone who believes that modern diplomacy is boring or unnecessary.’ The Rt Hon. Lord Hurd of Westwell CH CBE PC (Douglas Hurd, former UK Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs)

‘[Margaret] Joan Anstee’s varied and exciting career in national and international service has been primarily a search for the economic and social sources of greater security and equity in the world. Her book also provides an unusual, and refreshingly specific, account of the United Nations in action and of its unsung but significant achievements as well as its better known shortcomings.’ Sir Brian Urquhart, former Under Secretary-General of the United Nations

‘Margaret Anstee’s memoir recounts the life of a distinguished international civil servant in an era of dramatic change. It is an engrossing story, told with deep conviction as well as a sharp eye for describing a wide range of societies and people. A personal - as well as a political - adventure story, Dame Margaret’s memoir paints a revealing portrait of life on the frontlines of the engagement between the developed and developing worlds.’ Chester A. Crocker, Professor at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University, Washington, and former US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs

‘Margaret Anstee has been a witness to many of the momentous events that shaped the last 50 years. As a woman in what was still very much a man’s world of power broking and top level diplomacy, her various posts in the United Nations took her to hot spots such as Chile, where she witnessed the carnage of the Pinochet coup; Ethiopia where many of her friends died when the Emperor was overthrown; and to Chernobyl, one of the most alarming experiences of her life.

During 41 years of UN service she visited 130 member states and always her strong sense of adventure comes through. Not for her the stuffiness of maps and reference books, this is a writer who sets off up rivers, into the plains, mountains and deserts to get to the heart of a country. This is a remarkable story told by a remarkable lady.’ Rt. Hon Peter Hain, MP, Secretary of State for Wales (Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, 1999-2002)

‘Dame Margaret Anstee has made an outstanding contribution to development, peace-keeping and conflict resolution over four decades. Her achievements are truly inspirational.’ The Rt Hon. Jack Straw MP, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs

‘A truly absorbing account of achievement and adventure, by a remarkable woman trail-blazing in the once pinstriped world of international diplomacy. Margaret Anstee wisely never learned to type – but she certainly knows how to write in a way that engages and holds the reader’s attention from beginning to end.’ The Rt Hon. The Lord Howe of Aberavon CH QC (Geoffrey Howe, former UK Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Deputy Prime Minister)

‘An extraordinary book about an extraordinary life. Dame Margaret Anstee’s story begins in rural England and describes the breaking down of the barriers of gender discrimination in a man’s world, of facing the challenges of development in the third world, especially in Bolivia, and of conflict resolution and peace-keeping in the globalised world. A story written with wit, charm and affection about a life devoted to the evolution of the United Nations where she achieved the position of Under Secretary-General. Thank God she never learned to type but learned to think and care!’ Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada, President of Bolivia

‘Margaret Joan Anstee is the first woman to have headed a United Nations peace-keeping mission and her experience for over four decades in the UN is unique.

Her book Never Learn to Type is a remarkable and entertaining account of her adventures in many parts of the world.’ Boutros Boutros-Ghali, former Secretary-General of the United Nations

‘I am very pleased to have a new opportunity to express my gratitude to Margaret for the remarkable services she rendered for 41 years to the United Nations. In my 10 years as Secretary-General, my experience with her was extraordinary. Her affection, intelligence and strength to achieve her goals always had my admiration and support. On many occasions her actions as Secretary-General’s Special Representative were very successful and helpful for different countries.

Even though I always had very good reports of her, I only met her for the first time in 1982 when I became Secretary-General of the United Nations and I wanted her to be my Chef de Cabinet. Unfortunately this never happened, but I personally gave her different responsibilities, especially in Latin America, a continent I knew she loved and where she had lived for many years having very good work experiences.

In 1987, as she describes in these memoirs, when she took the post of Director-General of UN Office at Vienna she became, with all my support and pleasure, the first woman Under Secretary-General. I know she had hard times in Vienna especially because, as an additional responsibility, she was in charge of reviewing the UN programmes on drugs and social development, but at the same time I am sure she is now satisfied with the results of her work along the years.’ Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, former Secretary-General of the United Nations --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 560 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley (June 28, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0470854316
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470854310
  • Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 5 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,124,690 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring Story Told By An Amazing Woman, July 11, 2004
By 
Marsha Wood Wirtel (Philly's Western 'Burbs) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Margaret Joan Anstee's life reads like the script of an epic movie: financially challenged semi-rural childhood redeemed by her parents' commitment to educating their daughter (not at all common in the early part of the 20th century), the intervention of a few kind and well-connected teachers, and the serious smarts of Anstee herself. From rationing and loss associated with World War II to the hallowed halls of Oxford to just about every important geopolitical event of the latter half of the last century, Anstee brings to life the people and places that colored her life (and impacted the world!).

Anstee writes with a sense of humor and bemusement. Relating an episode wherein she and a girlfriend are kept as virtual hostages by a pair of elderly women from whom they had rented a room, one gets more a sense of amusement at the whole event rather than an impression of terror. This attitude of welcoming and seeking adventure and the improbable permeates the entire book and is shown to be a key value that led Anstee into her globehopping life.

Anstee relentlessly confronted the limitations that others continuually tried to place upon her. Her gender, social class, education and even religion could have prevented her from accomplishing even a fraction of what is related here and no one would have cast even the smallest amount of blame. But she not only overcomes these obstacles but actually triumphs over them. Anstee is a true inspiration and an amazing woman.

"Never Learn To Type" is a highly recommended book for anyone who wants to learn from the example of one who never quit even when given more than ample opportunity to do so, who wishes a backstage pass to key events of her time or who just wants to enjoy a good story of a life well lived.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A role modle for young women, October 3, 2008
By 
Gary A. Gabriel (Rhode Island, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Never Learn to Type: A Woman at the United Nations (Paperback)
Ms. Anstee's book shares her life's incrediable story, much of which is her role with the United Nations. I knew her when we both worked with the United Nations and I learned much from her that helped my own career and my work with the United Nations. It is a great read that shows what one woman achieved at a time when women were considered only suitable to be secretaries, thus the title. Her story is also great in presenting a view of what the United Nations does.

Gary Gabriel (now retired from the United Nations)
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
One Sunday evening in 1915 a young soldier, invalided home from Gallipoli, shyly greeted a pretty young girl after church in Kington, a small market town in north-west Herefordshire, where he had been sent to recuperate. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
regional bureaux, resident representative, planning minister, specialised agencies, rural development programme
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, United Nations, Prime Minister, Foreign Office, Latin America, United States, Soviet Union, World Bank, Capacity Study, Addis Ababa, Cold War, Under Secretary-General, David Owen, Victor Paz, Buenos Aires, Blue Helmets, Pérez de Cuéllar, Paul Hoffman, Assistant Secretary-General, Foreign Ministry, Villa Clara Rosa, Awash Valley, Gorsty Doles, Lake Titicaca, Santa Cruz
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