
Secrets and Lies
The Trials of Christine Keeler
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Narrated by:
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Sophie Cookson
About this listen
The sensational true story behind the major TV drama series The Trial of Christine Keeler, performed by Sophie Cookson.
In her own words, the life of the beautiful young model and dancer who helped to bring down the Tory government of Harold Macmillan - the 'Profumo Affair' remains the greatest political sex scandal in recent British history.
Having found fame and success as a model, Christine's short affair with the minister for war, John Profumo, led to his downfall at the end of Harold Macmillan's Conservative government and was at the heart of the social and political earthquake that followed. She became the subject of scandal, intrigue and gossip and was tried for perjury and briefly jailed following the death of Stephen Ward, the socialite who had introduced her to Profumo.
Following Christine Keeler's death in December 2017, her book has been updated to include revelations that she did not wish to be published in her lifetime. The result is an audiobook containing material that has never been officially released, which really does lift the lid on just how far the Establishment will go to protect its own.
©2019 Douglas Thompson and Christine Keeler (P)2019 Bonnier Books UKWhat listeners say about Secrets and Lies
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- carl k.
- 11-08-22
Eye opener
packed with information and intrigue. I always thought the elites looked after each but this proves it. Christine should've been looked after all that happened.
the narrator was perfect and brought it all to life.
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- Gerbilly
- 19-06-22
Swinging 60s!
This was a brilliant listen. The narrator was excellent and Christine’s story real although I do think still redacted of political and spying shenanigans until 2064.
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- Samantha Sweet
- 04-03-25
I always knew it…
I have been fascinated with the Perfumo affair since I did politics at A-level in the 80’s.
I could never understand how people believed that a barely 20 year old could be the scapegoat for all of those old traditional conservative, powerful, deviant men? Now it would be preposterous that this could have ever happened to her, but the fact that it did was awful.
And Lucky Gordon? I can’t even believe that he was allowed to live in society with the amount of times that he had harmed other women.
She was no saint by any means but I truly believe she told the truth here. Like we finally heard the real truth. I feel so sad that she never seemed to really have anybody that had her back apart from ironically, Stephen Ward in the very beginning, but I really enjoyed this and I hope that they make a proper movie out of this book, so we actually get the truth.
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- KevPierce
- 12-12-21
THE TRUTH I THINK
I CANT BELIEVE MAIN STREAM MEDIA NOT PICKED UP ON THESE NEW REVELATIONS THAT STEPHEN WARD WAS A RUSSIAN SPY BUT NOT SURE IF THEY DEEM HER NOT CREDIBLE BUT I BELIEVE HER MORE THAN WHAT THE ESTABLISHMENT SAYS HAPPENDED.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Mrs C L Collin
- 30-09-21
Intrigue… and annoyance
You can’t help thinking throughout that this woman needed her head looking at. The countless disastrous decisions just glossed over by Ms Keeler in this book just left me thinking she wasn’t capable of making any good decisions. I’m not getting any admission of wrongdoing on her part nor any real regret other than when situations inevitably turned out badly for her. It’s a frustrating read, one car crash after another and she never seems to grow up. I’m feel bad for her sons. There’s more to read on the espionage that’s for sure without the endless faux romance interruptions this read gives. I spent so much time groaning “You idiot“ throughout this.
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- Graham G Grant
- 24-02-20
Lies and spies in Swinging London
The recent BBC drama series on the Profumo Affair starred Sophie Cookson as Christine Keeler, and in this audiobook Cookson narrates Keeler's memoir. It provides much more background detail on Keeler's belief that Stephen Ward, her one-time alleged pimp, was in fact a Soviet spy, though probably closer to a double agent, who ran a network of young women with the aim of luring targets into honey-traps to compromise them, and to extract secrets from them. Society osteopath Ward was probably scapegoated by the Establishment - convicted on dubious charges of living off "immoral earnings" as a kind of high society pimp, and killing himself before the conclusion of his trial. But Keeler paints an even darker picture. She felt Ward used her for espionage (she delivered secrets to the Russian Embassy, though claims she didn't know what was in the envelope). She says Ward attempted to murder her. And she believed his case was a miscarriage of justice - not that Ward was convicted, but that he was convicted of pimping and not spying. There's an understandable bitterness that runs through the book, as Keeler ends up living in a rough London housing estate called "World's End" with her son Seymour. She loses her dinner-lady job after the headteacher discovers who she is. Keeler spent a lifetime in the shadow of a scandal often credited with bringing down a Conservative government (though ironically Keeler was a lifelong Tory voter!), and became an expert on the background, reading up on the key figures. This book appears to rest largely on Keeler "filling in the blanks" - she heard and saw a lot living with Ward, but at the time might have been in the dark about the significance of the people he spent time with. How much of the book is based on subsequent study is difficult to know, but most of it seemed plausible.
She educated herself in the years that followed, even getting hold of old FBI files on her (now online). It's the remarkably destructive effect that the Profumo Affair had on the lives of just about everyone involved - and the secrecy that still surrounds it - which continue to fascinate. The narration can be a bit grating - Cookson uses the "little girl lost" accent from the TV series - and by the end I was starting to lose sympathy a little for Keeler, and to wonder if she was quite as naive as she'd always maintained. But it does provide a great picture of what was going on behind closed doors and in exclusive clubs in London in the 1960s, and as Keeler's memoir it is unmissable for anyone with an interest in the greatest sex scandal in British political history.
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8 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 01-03-21
Secrets and lies......
Fantastic performance and so much more than the BBC 6 part series.
At times difficult to believe the naivety of Christine but that’s with today’s viewpoint and the sixties was a very different time.
I like to believe this is a true and accurate account but also that much has been kept secret. Men have always manipulated both women and other men so this comes as no surprise. The extent of this is truly shocking as we tend to believe people (men) in power are honest but to gain those positions they can never be.
I thoroughly enjoyed this and highly recommend it.
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2 people found this helpful
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- Squeaky Joe
- 30-11-22
A fascinating tale
Sixties model Christine Keeler tells her part in helping bring down Harold Macmillan’s government via the infamous scandal known as the Profumo Affair. Uncovering the intimate lives of her friends Stephen Ward and model Mandy Rice-Davies, Keeler relates what actually happened all those years ago, including disclosures she did not wish to be published in her lifetime.
This is the updated version of Keeler’s book, The Truth at Last: My Story (2001), with additions which (supposedly) have only recently been released. For sure it’s an absorbing story that points the finger at a lot of government and other officials for their parts in covering up the truth. Even today, details of the enquiry led by Lord Denning won’t see daylight until 2063, which suggest Keeler’s version of events is probably right. What is a little hard to believe is her unerring ability to recall the precise details of all those conversations, dates and events from nearly forty years earlier (at the time of publication of the first book). Aside from Profumo’s letters to her, there is no mention of diaries, notes or other recordings used to back up her story.
Nevertheless, it’s a fascinating tale, excellently narrated by Sophie Cookson, who also starred in the recent BBC dramatisation.
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- Adanaya
- 01-02-20
Riddle me riddle me riddle me ree
In a story like this, you can chhose your side of the fence or sit on it. I'm choosing a side and it's Miss Keeler's.Her story rings true to me, and as someone who came very close to becoming the Christine Keeler of the eighties, it was the story of what had happened to her that saved me. I came to a crossroad, and took a sharp right, but I saw the seedy side of London society and it didn't seem to have changed too much. I was a secretary to a wealthy club owner, but kept outside the gates instead of walking through, turning down endless offers of flats, cars, trips to exotic locations, until it became far too tough to keep on saying variations on a theme of 'flattered but no'. No names, most of them are dead anyway.
Measuring what didn't happen to me against what did happen to Christine, I'd have no hesitation in saying that she was groomed, used and abused. Would it happen now? Re-cast with available characters and yes. Maybe not bringing down a government, but that young girls are dazzled by rank and money? Yes. Should they know better? How?
I found this account painfully convincing and I'd recommend it to anyone.
And if a Belgium arms dealer or American property developer asks you to go to Wai kiki beach, or a Park Lane Hotel, say no.. It's a dark and destructive road to walk, run or drive down. Thank you Christine.
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21 people found this helpful
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- sally
- 31-08-24
Riveting
The completeness of the account from Keeler's perspective is helpful and enthralling. Well told and shocking, especially in respect of the routine abuse of women and the prevalence of male corruption
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