Shadow Of My HandA Memoir Author:Alun Chalfont As appropriate for a Welshman, Lord Chalfont takes his title from a Dylan Thomas poem, Fern Hill. His memoirs are the account of how a Welsh grammar schoolboy, whose ambition was to join the army, ended up, to his astonishment, in Harold Wilsons Labour government as a Peer and as Minister for Disarmament, and how, in a further... more » unlikely twist, he found himself working for the Sultan of Brunei. On the morning after Labour won the 1964 General Election in a landslide, and Harold Wilson became Prime Minister, the Defence Correspondent of The Times, Alun Gwynne-Jones, received a call to go forthwith to No 10 Downing Street. To his astonishment he was offered by Harold Wilson a Peerage, a seat on the Privy Councillor, and the position of Minister for Disarmament. For Gwynne-Jones, who took the title Lord Chalfont, life would never be the same again. Three of his six years as a FO minister coincided with George Brown as Foreign Secretary. His boorishness, his love of drink, led to some hair-raising stories, which Chalfont relates. The second side of his public life, as a businessmen, allows him the opportunity to write about the Gummer family he was a director of Shandwick, Peter Gummers PR company; and he adds revelations about the life of Lonrhos controversial Chairman, Tiny Rowland, whose path he crossed.« less