Barbara Leaming is a New York Times bestselling author. Her biography of John F. Kennedy was the first to detail the extraordinary influence of Winston Churchill on President Kennedy’s intellectual formation and political strategies. She lives in Connecticut.
Churchill Defiant: Fighting On: 1945-1955
eBook
-
ISBN-13:
9780062015334
- Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
- Publication date: 10/12/2010
- Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 368
- File size: 2 MB
What People are Saying About This
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
New York Times bestselling biographer Barbara Leaming has written a riveting political dramaof the last ten years of Winston Churchill's public life.
In Churchill Defiant, Leaming tells the tumultuous behind-the-scenes story of Churchill's refusal to retire after his 1945 electoral defeat, and the bare-knuckled political and personal battles that ensued. Her ground-breaking biography Jack Kennedy: The Education of a Statesman, was the first to detail Churchill's extraordinary influence on Kennedy's thinking. Now in Churchill Defiant, Leaming gives us a vivid and compelling narrative that sheds fresh light on both the human dimension of Winston Churchill and on the struggles and achievements of his final years. At last, in Leaming's eloquent account, we understand the tangled web of personal relationships and rivalries, the intricate interplay of past and present, the looming sense of history that makes the story of these years as fascinating as anything in the extraordinary century-long saga of Winston Churchill's life.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- Hitler
- by Joachim Fest
-
- The Churchills: In Love and…
- by Mary S. Lovell
-
- Ethan Allen: His Life and…
- by Willard Sterne Randall
-
- Churchill's Bodyguard
- by Tom Hickman
-
- Kennedy Justice
- by Victor S. Navasky
-
- The Revolutionary Paul Revere
- by Joel J. Miller
-
- Tolstoy: A Russian Life
- by Rosamund Bartlett
-
- Joe Gould's Secret
- by Joseph Mitchell
-
- Pulitzer: A Life in Politics,…
- by James McGrath Morris
-
- American Soldier
- by Tommy R. Franks
-
- Return to Earth
- by Buzz AldrinWayne Warga
-
- The Importance of Being Ernie:…
- by Barry Livingston
-
- The Unfinished Odyssey of…
- by David Halberstam
Recently Viewed
Accomplished biographer Leaming (Jack Kennedy: The Education of a Statesman, 2006, etc.) tracks Winston Churchill's masterful postwar comeback.
Voted from power just as he was implementing the Allied peace terms at Potsdam and warning of Soviet expansion in Eastern Europe, Churchill was blindsided but determined to continue to lead his Conservative party. The author provides a lively chronicle of his incremental rehabilitation. Churchill's career might have been heretofore defined by "unsquashable resilience," but he was "absorbed by the idea that a comeback was impossible." His warning of pernicious goings-on behind "the iron curtain" was out of sync with the popular mood of triumphant celebration in August 1945. Yet despite being in his 70s and having suffered several strokes, he spent the next five years speechifying, preparing his memoirs, painting and traveling. He refused to retire, believing that he still had a mission to accomplish. Moreover, he maintained that his heir apparent, Anthony Eden, was not ready to inherit the mantle. As Truman and the West were catching on to the Soviet threat, Churchill redoubled his "usual blood-and-thunder anti-socialism" message. He used the occasion of the publication ofThe Gathering Storm (1947) to remind readers of his initial warnings to the Allies about allowing the Russians to take Berlin first, a decision defended vehemently by Eisenhower his memoir published the same year, Crusade in Europe. The Conservatives were voted back in by October 1951, and Churchill immediately pushed for a summit with Stalin but was put off by the American presidential election. Stalin's subsequent death, Eden's ill health, Churchill's own faltering strength and the necessity of negotiating the atomic debates and Indo-China machinations led to final debilitation, and he was squeezed out shortly after his 80th birthday. Using a variety of material, Leaming executes a smooth, succinct narrative.
Tight, polished and effectively focused on the lesser-known end of Churchill's career.