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Winston S. Churchill

Personal Information

Born November 30, 1874
Died January 24, 1965 (90 years old)
Blenheim Palace, United Kingdom
Also known as: Sir Winston Churchill, Churchill, Winston Sir
17 books
3.3 (4)
167 readers

Description

Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, KG, OM, CH, TD, PC, FRS was a British politician known chiefly for his leadership of the United Kingdom during World War II. He is widely regarded as one of the great wartime leaders. He served as Prime Minister from 1940 to 1945 and again from 1951 to 1955. A noted statesman and orator, Churchill was also an officer in the British Army, a historian, writer and artist. To date, he is the only British Prime Minister to have received the Nobel Prize in Literature, and the first person to be recognised as an honorary citizen of the United States.

Books

Newest First

The Second World War

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"The Second World War surpassed all previous wars in the sheer cost of many millions of lives, the majority of them civilian. It left a world reeling from physical destruction on a scale never experience before or since, and from the psychological traumas of loss, of imprisonment and genocide, and permanent exile from home.". "In this short book, Joanna Bourke turns an unblinking eye on the events and outcomes in the vast number of places where the war was fought: throughout Western and Central Europe, on the Eastern Front in the Soviet Union, in the Pacific, in Africa, in Asia. She shows where the strategic decisions came from and how they were implemented. In addition to the facts of this global conflict, she details the human, individual cost. Through diary entries and recorded oral history, we experience how ordinary people felt when they witnessed or heard of events, from the declaration of war on the radio to the mass murders carried out by Nazi soldiers in Russian villages." "Our understanding of the past conflict and our own age of violence and human atrocity into which the Second World War thrust us will be greatly enhanced by the scope and detail of this book."--BOOK JACKET.

A history of the English-speaking peoples

3.0 (3)
99

Sketches of sixteen of Churchill's favorite historical characters selected from his four-volume A history of the English-speaking Peoples, followed by a profile of Sir Winston drawn from autobiographical writings and speeches.

Their finest hour

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One of the most fascinating works of history ever written, Winston's Churchill's monumental The Second World War is a six-volume account of the struggle of the Allied powers in Europe against Germany and the Axis. Told through the eyes of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, The Second World War is also the story of one nation's singular, heroic role in the fight against tyranny. Pride and patriotism are evident everywhere in Churchill's dramatic account and for good reason. Having learned a lesson at Munich that they would never forget, the British refused to make peace with Hitler, defying him even after France had fallen and after it seemed as though the Nazis were unstoppable. Churchill remained unbowed throughout, as did the people of Britain in whose determination and courage he placed his confidence. Patriotic as Churchill was, he managed to maintain a balanced impartiality in his description of the war. What is perhaps most interesting, and what lends the work its tension and emotion, is Churchill's inclusion of a significant amount of primary material. We hear his retrospective analysis of the war, to be sure, but we are also presented with memos, letters, orders, speeches, and telegrams that give a day-by-day account of the reactions-both mistaken and justified-to the unfolding drama. Strategies and counterstrategies develop to respond to Hitler's ruthless conquest of Europe, his planned invasion of England, and his treacherous assault on Russia. It is a mesmerizing account of the crucial decisions that have to be made with imperfect knowledge and an awareness that the fate of the world hangs in the balance. In Their Finest Hour, the second volume of this work, Churchill describes the German invasion of France and the growing sense of dismay on the part of the British and French leadership as it becomes clear that the German war machine is simply too overpowering. As the French defenses begin to crumble, Churchill faces some bleak options: should the British meet France's desperate pleas for reinforcements of troops, ships, and aircraft in the hopes of turning the tide, or should they husband their resources in preparation for the inevitable German assault if France falls?In the book's second half, entitled "Alone," Churchill discusses Great Britain's position as the last stronghold of resistance against the German conquest. The expected events are all included in fascinating detail: the battle for control of the skies over Britain, the bombing of London, the diplomatic efforts to draw the United States into the war, and the spread of the conflict into Africa and the Middle East. But we also hear of the contingency plans, the speculations about what will happen should Britain fall to Hitler, and how the far-flung reaches of its Empire could turn to rescue the mother country. The behind-the-scenes deliberations, the fears expressed, and the possibilities considered continually remind us of exactly what was at stake and how grim the situation often seemed.Churchill won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1953 due in no small part to this awe-inspiring work.

Liberalism and the social problem

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"In 1904 Winston S. Churchill crossed the parliamentary floor and became a member of the Liberal Party. When the Liberals took office, Churchill became the Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies, becoming a most prominent member of the Government, and in 1908 was promoted to the Cabinet. The speeches in this collection deal with the key issues of the day, including the adoption of constitutions for the defeated Boer republics of Transvaal and the Orange River Colony and the 'People's Budget,' which taxed the wealthy to fund social welfare programmes. In fact the proposed budget led to the dissolution of Parliament less than a week after publication, following its rejection by the Conservative-dominated House of Lords. The radicalism of the young Churchill, often overshadowed by his leadership during the Second World War, is indisputable in these speeches; he challenged the privileges of the House of Lords, championed welfare legislation and campaigned for Home Rule in Ireland. This collection offers an intriguing insight into the early political thinking and development of one of the greatest minds of the twentieth century."--Bloomsbury Publishing.

London to Ladysmith via Pretoria

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The future prime minister's dispatches from the Anglo-Boer war, originally as a journalist, later also a participant and officer of irregular cavalry.

The river war

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"First published in 1899 and revised for the 1902 edition by its author, Winston Churchill, this history of the River War in Sudan vividly chronicles the military campaign that altered the destinies of England, Egypt, and the Arabian peoples in northeast Africa.". "Churchill not only relates the catastrophic events in Sudan's 1880s but also places them in the context of Sudanese history. So it is that his subsequent account of the reconquest and pacification of Sudan by a mixed Anglo-Egyptian force under the command of Sir Herbert Kitchener weds history to destiny, as the outcome of the River War for decades would link Great Britain to the uneasy future of Egypt and Sudan."--BOOK JACKET.

The story of the Malakand Field Force

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The future prime minister served as an officer with a cavalry unit in India that saw no action, while he was there. Wanting to see some fighting, young Churchill connived to get himself temporarily attached to the Malakand field force, which was in action in the northwest frontier area and contracted with some British newspapers to write of what he saw. Informative, exciting and well written. Highly relevant today, for his description of the culture and attitude of the people of northern Pakistan, along the Afghan border. Churchill tells you who the Taliban are.

The Arbor House Treasury of Horror and the Supernatural

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37

Contains: Hop frog / Edgar Allan Poe -- [Rappaccini's Daughter]( / Nathaniel Hawthorne -- Squire Toby's will / J. Sheridan Le Fanu -- The squaw / Bram Stoker -- The jolly corner / Henry James -- "Man overboard!" / Winston Churchill -- The hand / Theodore Dreiser -- The valley of the spiders / H.G. Wells -- The middle toe of the right foot / Ambrose Bierce -- Pickman's model / H.P. Lovecraft -- Yours truly, Jack the ripper / Robert Bloch -- The screaming laugh / Cornell Woolrich -- [A rose for Emily]( / William Faulkner -- Bianca's hands / Theodore Sturgeon -- The girl with the hungry eyes / Fritz Leiber -- Shut a final door / Truman Capote -- Come and go mad / Fredric Brown -- The scarlet king / Evan Hunter -- Sticks / Karl Edward Wagner -- Sardonicus / Ray Russell -- A teacher's rewards / Robert Phillips -- The roaches / Thomas M. Disch -- The jam / Henry Slesar -- Black wind / Bill Pronzini -- The road to Mictlantecutli / Adobe James -- Passengers / Robert Silverberg -- The explosives expert / John Lutz -- Call first / Ramsey Campbell -- The fly / Arthur Porges -- Namesake / Elizabeth Morton -- Camps / Jack Dann -- You know Willie / Theodore R. Cogswell -- The mindworm / C.M. Kornbluth -- Warm / Robert Scheckley -- Transfer / Barry N. Malzberg -- The doll / Joyce Carol Oates -- If Damon comes / Charles L. Grant -- Mass without voices / Arthur L. Samuels -- The oblong room / Edward D. Hoch -- The party / William F. Nolan -- The crate / Stephen King.