A poor player, that struts and frets his hour upon the stage and then is heard no more…


Churchill defiant: fighting on, 1945-1955 New York: Harper, c 2010      Barbara Leaming Great Britain Politics and government 1945-1964 Hardcover. 1st. ed. and printing. vi, 355 p.: ill.; 24 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. [309]-341) and index. Clean, tight and strong binding with clean dust jacket. No highlighting, underlining or marginalia in text. VG/VG

“I am an obstinate pig.” This was how Winston Churchill described himself. This is Winston Churchill in close-up — a compelling portrait of the man at a time when almost no one wanted him to remain on the public stage and when he was willing to do absolutely anything to stay there. Here is Churchill at his most outrageous, maddening, and devious.

At the end of July 1945, Winston Churchill was a defeated man — hurled from power by the British people at the end of the war from a position that he had never achieved through popular election. Churchill Defiant is the story of how, when it seemed impossible, Churchill fought his way back over the next six years to the center of great events. In 1951, at last prime minister once more, he was ready to begin his dash to win “the last prize I seek”: the enduring peace that had eluded the world after Hitler‘s defeat.

But Churchill’s battles were just beginning. He would have to wage war with both his closest colleagues and his most indispensable allies, the Americans, to get where none of them wanted him to go: the negotiating table with the Soviets. Barbara Leaming has written a fast-paced narrative of bare-knuckle politics, of life-and-death decisions, of old grudges and fresh blame. It is the story of how, between 1945 and 1955, Churchill simultaneously fought to prevent a third world war and to defy his own mortality as the clock ticked away and time threatened to run out for him.

In Leaming’s book, we receive an account of the tangled web of personal relationships and rivalries, the intricate interplay of past and present and, 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.

 

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