Hatchards and The Biographers’ Club are delighted to announce the shortlist for the Hatchards First Biography Prize 2025

2025 SHORTLIST

Crick: A Mind in Motion – From DNA to the Brain by Matthew Cobb

Francis Crick was a restless, relentless thinker, as fascinated by Beat poetry and psychedelics as the genetic meaning of life and the inner workings of the brain. Yet for all his drive, he was galvanised by collaboration: with Jim Watson on DNA, with artists in Cambridge and California, and with his wife Odile, who drew the figure of the double helix that illuminated his most famous discovery. It was his debates and conflicts with these collaborators that powered a remarkable mind in motion.

Meticulously researched and shot through with insight and electrifying detail, Matthew Cobb reveals the man who changed our view of life forever. Crick is the first major biography of one of the twentieth century’s most exciting minds.

Operation Pimento by Adam Hart

On 14 August 1943 Adam Hart’s great-grandfather Frank Griffiths took off from a secret SOE airbase in rural England on a midnight mission codenamed Operation Pimento. Shot down near Annecy in south-east France, only Frank survived. Though seriously injured, Frank embarked on a perilous 1,200-mile,108-day escape across Europe, via the attic of a brothel, a Frenchwoman’s chimney and a Spanish prison cell.

Seventy-nine years later, Frank’s 22-year-old great-grandson Adam Hart retraced the epic journey through France, Switzerland and Spain on a mission to discover more about a man he’d never met, but always knew to be a hero.

John and Paul: A Love Story in Songs by Ian Leslie

A masterly chronicle of the greatest songwriting partnership in pop, Leslie’s dual biography of Lennon and McCartney focuses on their symbiotic relationship as well as the shared grief and hunger for connection they channelled into their songs. Ian Leslie traces the twists and turns of their relationship through the music it produced and offers rich insights into the nature of creativity, collaboration and human connection. Drawing on recently released footage and recordings, this is a startlingly fresh take on two of the greatest icons in music history.

Leslie’s majestic and wildly enjoyable biography makes us see and hear Lennon and McCartney anew.

Peacemaker: U Thant, The United Nations and the Untold Story of the 1960s by Thant Myint-U

In the early 1960s the still-young United Nations was regarded as the best hope for maintaining world peace. At the helm was Secretary-General U Thant, a practising Buddhist and former schoolteacher from Burma. Thant Myint-U traces his grandfather’s integral roles in resolving some of the era’s greatest crises, the war in Congo, the Cuban Missile Crisis and the 1967 Six Day War among them. Drawing on newly declassified documents, he traces U Thant’s tireless efforts to bring peace to Vietnam, create a fairer international economy, safeguard the environment, and avoid a third world war.

Peacemaker is an extraordinary chronicle of a golden age of diplomacy – and vital to a deeper understanding of our world today.

Careless People: A Story of Where I Used to Work by Sarah Wynne-Williams

In this honest, entertaining and at times shocking memoir, a former Facebook employee lifts the lid on the ruthless and absurd world of the new global tech elite and the enormous power they hold over us all. Sarah Wynn-Williams, a young diplomat from New Zealand, pitched for her dream job. She gets it, and rubs shoulders with Mark Zuckerberg, Sheryl Sandberg and world leaders, revealing what really goes on among the global elite – and the consequences this has for all of us. Shocking and darkly funny, Careless People gives you a front-row seat to the decisions that are shaping our world and the people who make them.

As all our lives are upended by technology and those who control it, Careless People will change how you see the world.

To see the full press release please click here

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