Churchill: A Biography by Roy Jenkins

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: November 2001
  • 736pp

Reader Rating: (10 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Research" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: November 2001
    • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
    • Format: Hardcover, 736pp

    Synopsis

    This biography takes the perspective that Churchill always believed he was destined for greatness, and thus, throughout his life, positioned himself in his careers, writing and politics, and in his proximity to the most important people and events in British governmental life to assure he would be prepared for the moment he would be in charge. Jenkins, who has published 18 books and is currently President of the Royal Society of Literature, incorporates many humorous anecdotal moments in his evaluation of this oft heralded political giant.

    Annotation © Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

    Los Angeles Times - Stanley Weintraub

    Roy Jenkins's quirky but mostly admiring life of Winston Churchill serves up the vanity with the glory, and the fudge with the facts.

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    Biography

    Roy Jenkins is the author of 18 books, including Gladstone (1997), which won the Whitbread Prize for Biography. Active in British politics for half a century, he entered the House of Commons in 1948 and subsequently served as Minister of Aviation, Home Secretary, and Chancellor of the Exchequer; he has also been the President of the European Commission and Chancellor of Oxford University. In 1987 he took his seat in the House of Lords

    Customer Reviews

    Not worth the effort, profoundly dissappointingby Discerning-Reader

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    December 08, 2009: I read a lot of history, all periods, and am a great fan of Churchill. I have several books about him and received this book as a gift at my request.

    What a profound dissappointment in both content and writing.

    The content is almost totally focussed on his early career in Parliament and goes into excruciating detail on everything to the point that you almost never have a sense of the bigger picture. If you want to know who was a friend of someone that was a cousin to someone else who was a roommate with someone who knew the son of somebody who was the third earl of somewhere who remarked that they heard Churchill make some remark to someone sitting next to him in Parliament, this is the book for you. Otherwise don't let the impressive book reviews fool you.

    This is the first book I had read by Jenkins. I was impressed by the reviews, but after reading the book conclude that the reviewers had not read the book and were writing their reviews with the intent to impress others with their perceived sophistication. The writing is excruciating with extremely long sentences and an oversupply of words that one might never have heard or seen before and will likely not see again. This is not erudiciton, this is showing off with objuscation. The length of many of the sentences was incredible. One actually went more than a page.

    When Jenkins finally gets to World War II, the pace suddenly changes and you are whisked in a few chapters to the end of the war and the end of the book.

    It is clear that Mr. Jenkins knew an incredible amount of detail regarding Churchill.

    My overall conclusion is that this is an excellent 25 page book crammed into a 1000 pages.

    Not For Your Average Readerby Anonymous

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    July 27, 2005: Jenkins is a fine writer and deeply knowledgable about England, parliament in particular. He is 'an insider,' a politician, a distinguished popular historian and a grown up. But this is nonetheless a perverse biography which is of use for only one group of people: those readers whose main interest is Churchill's parliamentary career as written by an insider. For the rest of us this book tantalizes and then frustrates. It jumps over (or omits) the most dramatic episodes of the story to give us nauseating detail about parliamentary debates that only a super-specialist would want to know about. This would be fine if we got such detail about everything else but no- only about parliamentary debates. I mean he describes who spoke first, second third and what their history in parliament was. But about Churchill's childhood and its influence - hardly a word and the word is dismissive. About his marriage to his wife - glimpses. We are told she was always away on trips but Jenkins refuses to venture an opinion as to why or even what Churchill's reaction was. It is almost as if his manners are too good to do anything other than talk about what happens in the public arena. I would strongly recommend this book only to academics(or amateurs) who have an interest in the history of the British House of Commons and Churchill's place in it. Don't let some of these previous reviews fool you. These reviewers are justly impressed with Jenkins gravitas and his age (he died before the book came out)and his political career and don't want to tell you the truth.


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