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Churchill: Visionary. Statesman. Historian.
Churchill: Visionary. Statesman. Historian.
Date: 06 May 2011, 20:13

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From Publishers Weekly
A prolific senior historian of modern Europe, Lukacs has written about Churchill many times before, most recently in Five Days in London, May 1940. That recycled a small part of his The Duel: 10 May-31 July: The Eighty-Day Struggle Between Churchill and Hitler. This rather thin new volume contains little that is new, and is seemingly a reorganization of Lukacs's lecture notes, leavings, reconsiderations and reviews. There are shrewd chapters on Churchill's cautious relations with Stalin, Roosevelt and Eisenhower, and on Churchill's critics. There are reevaluations of Churchill as a visionary and as a historian capable of "splendid phrases and passages," often at his best when "personal and participatory." Although Lukacs credits Churchill's extraordinary army of research assistants over much of a lifetime for his massive output, he fails to note that much of the work was written to order, fat contracts supporting an authorial lifestyle almost unique in his time. A chapter on Churchill and Eisenhower persuasively takes the political general down a peg or two, and the excoriation (and exposure) of the pompous Churchill-baiter John Charmley is overdue. A final chapter, personal observations on the three days in January 1965 when Lukacs went to London to observe the great man's obsequies, seems either padding or self-indulgence. Overall, though, Lukacs convincingly portrays a leader of an empire in irreversible decline and a towering, if flawed, hero of our time.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Lukacs was able to connect with a popular readership in his two histories about Churchill's finest hours in 1940 (The Duel, 1991, and Five Days in London, 1999); his work is also of special interest to professional historians (The Hitler of History, 1997). This volume of essays about the Churchill of history debates, sometimes explicitly in the form of reworked, previously published book reviews, other historians' critiques of the cigar-champing bulldog. In particular, Lukacs can't abide John Charmley, whose writings arraign Churchill for not negotiating with Hitler, the very theme of Five Days. Lukacs' ability to meld the scholarly with the popular is much in evidence here, particularly in the author's discussion of Churchill's quality as a historian. Here again, Lukacs defends Churchill against some dons (such as the late E. H. Carr), while conceding defects in some of Churchill's works. These books, especially the Nobel Prize-winning The Second World War, are perennially popular and evidence of the wide and enduring interest in Churchill. No doubt that interest will fuel demand for Lukacs' historiographic articles. Gilbert Taylor

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