One of a series of documentary volumes revealing how Churchill waged World War II. This one deals with the dramatic events of 1941, during which Britain faced massive air raids and the threat of starvation in the Battle of the Atlantic. It shows Churchill's strategic grasp and decisiveness.
Drawn from Churchill's personal papers and other archives, the document volumes contain materials referenced in the narrative, including top secret telegrams, private letters and diaries from family, friends, and opponents.
The Churchill War Papers: Never surrender
Drawn from Churchill's personal papers and other archives, the document volumes contain materials referenced in the narrative, including top secret telegrams, private letters and diaries from family, friends, and opponents.
Basing the book on his intimate knowledge of Churchill's private and official papers, Sir Martin Gilbert, Churchill’s official biographer, looks at the public figure and wartime propaganda, to reveal a very human, sensitive, and often ...
This magnificent new volume gives you exclusive access to the Churchill War Rooms, bringing you closer than ever before to where Churchill not only ran the war - but won it.
Drawn from Churchill's personal papers and other archives, the document volumes contain materials referenced in the narrative, including top secret telegrams, private letters and diaries from family, friends, and opponents.
Renowned Churchill historian Sir Martin Gilbert examines Winston Churchill’s War Leadership. Continue to Pester, Nag and Bite is the complete text of the 2004 Barbara Frum Historical Lecture, given at the University of Toronto.
CONTINUE TO PESTER, NAG AND BITE is a brilliant, close-up look at Winston Churchill's leadership during the Second World War. Gilbert gets to the crux of eternal questions that have...
Here is the many-faceted, world-historically significant story of Britain at war.
Menzies, Dark and Hurrying Days, pp. 70–71. “Salient points" and a view". Von Hassell, Diaries, pp. 171–72. “It is a bedlamite world". Menzies, Dark and Hurrying Days, p. 82. “We talked about". Gilbert, Churchill War Papers, vol. 3, pp.