It is a paean to partnership in an era where isolationism and strong man politics appears to be failing us. It Takes Two: A History of the Couples Who Dared to be Different is a book about how great pairs, from romantic couples to sworn rivals, have made history. ![]() ![]() Vibrant, feminist and unexpected, this brilliant history shows the value of friction, obsession, difference and trust when it comes to progress – and retrieves the work of many who have been forgotten, asking why certain collaborators are so often left out of the narrative. How did William and Ellen Craft pull off a perilous cross-country escape from slavery in the only possible disguise? How did the queer artists Marcel Moore and Claude Cahun become icons of the surrealist movement, then heroines of the resistance during WW2? How did Amelia Earhart and George ‘Mr Earhart’ Putnam forge a true marriage of equals and adventure? How do today’s most powerful couples – from Beyoncé and Jay-Z to Bill and Melinda Gates – negotiate coupledom and individual achievement in the spotlight? Bringing together an extraordinary range of stories from around the world, Newman shows how double acts have relied on each other, how minds have married to usher miraculous discoveries, and how those we think of as lone geniuses often come with invisible or intentionally forgotten collaborators. In It Takes Two, Cathy Newman rewrites the history books to expose this strange power of two – the reason Holmes and Watson need to come as a pair, and Apple could not have been started by Steve Jobs alone. From rivals pressuring each other forwards to friends combining their talents, it’s clear: often two heads are better than one. Throughout history, collaboration has fuelled greatness.
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