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Winston Churchill: A Life by John Keegan — book cover

Winston Churchill: A Life

by John Keegan
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Overview

One of the greatest historians writing today gives us a defining portrait of the incomparable Winston Churchill

In his landmark biography of Winston Churchill, acclaimed historian John Keegan offers a very human portrait of one of the twentieth century's enduring symbols of heroic defiance. From Churchill's youth as a poor student to his leadership during World War II, Keegan reveals a man whose own idea of an English past—eloquently embodied in his speeches—allowed him to exhort a nation to unprecedented levels of sacrifice. The result is a uniquely discerning look at one of the most fascinating personalities in history.

“The best military historian of our generation.” –Tom Clancy

Synopsis

Keegan (formerly military history, Royal Military Academy, UK, he's now defense editor of the Daily Telegraph) has written a celebratory biography of Churchill, recounting his early life and interests, his years in India and Egypt, his lifelong fascination with history, and his remarkable political career. The bulk of this short tome, fittingly, is devoted to the era of WWII. Annotation c. Book News, Inc.,Portland, OR

Publishers Weekly

The Old Testament and The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire were the most important influences on one of the 20th century's great wartime leaders. These books essentially created the man, argues renowned military historian Keegan (The First World War), and Churchill's own words would, in turn, be the key to his greatness: "In the end the personality of Churchill and the prose that inspired his being so interpenetrated each other as to be indistinguishable and mutually inextricable." This is somewhat ironic, Keegan shows in his concise, elegant biography, as Churchill (1874-1965) was a middling student who barely passed the entrance exam for military college. But his one love was history from his voracious, lifelong reading he gained a profound belief in Britain's glorious destiny. Keegan traces the familiar formative events in the future prime minister's life. During the Boer War, he was taken prisoner and his daring escape made him a national hero. After winning election to Parliament (as a Conservative) in 1900, Churchill began his political career championing social reforms that would help the working class. Indeed, his views were so pro-worker that he temporarily switched to the Labour Party. As Hitler rose to power, Churchill began a long, frustrating campaign calling for military preparedness in order to meet the growing fascist threat. Churchill's genius, Keegan stresses, was in his ability to communicate his vision of Britain as a glorious nation with a great civilizing mission, and the book does an excellent job describing his subject's rhetorical power. This is a pithy, highly accessible biography that can be enjoyed over a couple of sittings. (On sale Oct. 14) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

About the Author, John Keegan

John Keegan is one of the most distinguished contemporary military historians and a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He is the author of twenty books, including his bestselling The First World War.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

The Old Testament and The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire were the most important influences on one of the 20th century's great wartime leaders. These books essentially created the man, argues renowned military historian Keegan (The First World War), and Churchill's own words would, in turn, be the key to his greatness: "In the end the personality of Churchill and the prose that inspired his being so interpenetrated each other as to be indistinguishable and mutually inextricable." This is somewhat ironic, Keegan shows in his concise, elegant biography, as Churchill (1874-1965) was a middling student who barely passed the entrance exam for military college. But his one love was history from his voracious, lifelong reading he gained a profound belief in Britain's glorious destiny. Keegan traces the familiar formative events in the future prime minister's life. During the Boer War, he was taken prisoner and his daring escape made him a national hero. After winning election to Parliament (as a Conservative) in 1900, Churchill began his political career championing social reforms that would help the working class. Indeed, his views were so pro-worker that he temporarily switched to the Labour Party. As Hitler rose to power, Churchill began a long, frustrating campaign calling for military preparedness in order to meet the growing fascist threat. Churchill's genius, Keegan stresses, was in his ability to communicate his vision of Britain as a glorious nation with a great civilizing mission, and the book does an excellent job describing his subject's rhetorical power. This is a pithy, highly accessible biography that can be enjoyed over a couple of sittings. (On sale Oct. 14) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Lukacs (The Hitler of History; Five Days in London, May 1940) and Keegan (The First World War; Fields of Battle) are eminent historians whose appreciation for the character and deeds of Winston Churchill is quite evident in both of these works. While neither author shies away from discussing Churchill's flaws, it is the indomitable spirit of the prime minister that prevails in both books. According to Lukacs, it was Churchill's vision as a statesman-historian that places him at the top of the pantheon of 20th-century leaders. Unlike contemporaries Stalin, Roosevelt, or Eisenhower, Churchill fully understood the historical forces that were propelling the world toward cataclysmic changes. Thus he was an early opponent of the Hitler phenomenon and also foresaw the eventual disintegration of the Soviet Empire. Despite the overall panegyric tone of Lukacs's treatise, each chapter in this book is a tightly constructed essay based on a thorough familiarity with works by and about Churchill. Lukacs closes with his own firsthand account of attending the great man's funeral in 1965. It is a good choice for academic and larger public libraries. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A capable, brief study of Great Britain’s renowned wartime leader and the troubled course of his passionate—if hardly compassionate—conservatism.

Winston Churchill defined himself as both a military and literary man, and thus it makes perfect sense for the eminently literate military history Keegan (War and Our World, 2001, etc.) to add this volume to the rapidly growing Penguin Lives series. Keegan gives us a Churchill who, for most of his life, was essentially alone—"Churchill’s life," the author remarks, "is remarkable for its paucity of friendships: few in youth, eventually none at all." Friendless he may have been, but Churchill set out early on to accomplish great things as both an ardent student of the world (an indifferent scholar, he inhaled whole libraries of world literature and history) and a shaper of events. Often he succeeded, Keegan writes, but often he failed; he rose to eminence at the opening years of WWII after having been demoted and shuffled from one prewar government post to another, and his achievements leading the fight against Hitler took many of his contemporaries by surprise. Keegan gives us a Churchill who was at once aristocratic and populist, idealistic, and resolutely practical, strongly ideological yet capable of compromise (especially in the matter of accepting Stalin as a wartime ally, inasmuch as Churchill detested "Bolshevism" perhaps more than he ever did Nazism). Keegan faults much of Churchill’s wartime strategy, driven by his view that "the defeated peoples of Europe could be brought to wear down Germany’s control from within," which Keegan rebuts with the observation that partisan resistance was largely ineffectual, and that somehowdiversionary offensives on the flank of the enemy were preferable to full-on assault, such as that at Normandy. But Keegan also defends Churchill from the well-worn charge of alcoholism, and gives him in most other ways a respectful, if certainly not warm, treatment.

Sturdy and illuminating: of interest to students of modern British history and the conduct of WWII.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2007
Publisher
Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
Pages
208
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780143112648

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