About the Author:
JOHN SEWELL served as an alderman on Toronto City Council during the 1970s and was mayor of Toronto from 1978 to 1980. He chaired the Metro Toronto Housing Authority from 1986 to 1988 and the Commission on Planning and Development Reform in Ontario from 1991 to 1993. Sewell wrote an urban affairs column for The Globe and Mail from 1984 to 1986, currently writes for Now, a Toronto weekly, and is the author of Up Against City Hall, Police: Urban Policing in Canada, and the recently published The Shape of the City: Toronto Struggles with Modern Planning.
Review:
"... A fascinating read. The lessons to be learned (from this book) are: 1) Never send a journalist/politician to run a rebellion -- send a soldier with a clear game plan, command structure and enough ready, willing and able troops; 2) The present neo-conservative predominance of politics, media and business in Canada is the Family Compact of Mackenzie's day." (Mike Harcourt)
"It is a brave book." (Carol Goar Toronto Star)
"A fantastic biography of William Lyon Mackenzie, who was Toronto's first mayor, and who I think might end up as a model for a new political passion in this country." (Ian Brown CBC Radio's Talking Books)
"To paint a portrait of a great democrat, Sewell makes much use of stirring passages from Mackenzie's pen." (The Globe and Mail)
"[Mackenzie makes for very good reading, indeed. Citizen Sewell, it turns out, has a real feel for his subject and adroitly communicates the excitement he himself experienced in such a concentrated exploration of the past." (John Fraser National Post)
"It is a delight to read activist Sewell on activist Mackenzie. The two men are linked in so many ways -- both mayors, both activists, both writers, and both adamant that the interests and rights of the common citizenry take precedent over whatever elite power each generation is prone to throw up. Good politics. Good read." (R.H. Thompson)
"Sewell's [Mackenzie is probably the best concise biography of his storied predecessor in the mayor's chair that you're likely to find." (The Toronto Star)
"This is a biography of William Lyon Mackenzie situated in the charged political atmosphere of Upper Canada in the 19th century. This book offers an excellent analysis of the struggle for a truly responsible government. Sewell points out the parallels between the Family Compact and today's government structure. He clearly illustrates our present need for comprehensive reform." (Marion Dewar)
"This exciting, well-told account of Mackenzie and the 1837 rebellion is a powerful reminder that Canadian democracy didn't just happen; people fought and died to put it in place." (Linda McQuaig)
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.