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“At last! A book to put all the other books on Churchill into perspective. The Great Man was in danger of becoming hidden by the forest of verbiage in his memory. Gretchen Rubin cuts a clear path to her subject, and along the way takes the reader on a fascinating and hilarious journey.”
—AMANDA FOREMAN, bestselling author of Georgiana: Duchess of Devonshire
“Was there ever a better subject for biography? Heroic, petty, noble, selfish, courageous, devious, grandiloquent, plain-speaking, generous, tyrannical, Churchill was all these and more. Rubin strives to capture the essence of her larger-than-life subject not through a head-on assault, but by circling him and taking snapshots from a multiplicity of angles. Her Forty Ways to Look at Winston Churchill is a feat of intelligent compression, a stereoscopic portrait for the space age, a biography in miniature, and not least, a rattling good read.”
—MICHAEL SCAMMELL, author of Solzhenitsyn: A Biography
| Introduction | 1 | |
| 1 | Churchill as Liberty's Champion: Heroic View | 11 |
| 2 | Churchill as Failed Statesman: Critical View | 20 |
| 3 | Churchill's Contemporaries: Whom He Knew | 33 |
| 4 | Churchill's Finest Hour - May 28, 1940: The Decisive Moment | 35 |
| 5 | Churchill as Leader: Suited to High Office? | 42 |
| 6 | Churchill's Genius with Words: His Greatest Strength | 46 |
| 7 | Churchill's Eloquence: His Exact Words | 55 |
| 8 | Churchill in Symbols: Metonymy | 69 |
| 9 | Churchill, True: In a Single Word | 74 |
| 10 | Churchill's Desire for Fame: His Motive | 77 |
| 11 | Churchill as Depressive: The "Black Dog"? | 82 |
| 12 | Churchill's Disdain: His Dominant Quality | 86 |
| 13 | Churchill's Belligerence: His Defining Characteristic | 92 |
| 14 | Churchill's Time Line: Key Events | 98 |
| 15 | Churchill as Son: His Most Formative Role | 103 |
| 16 | Churchill as Father: A Good Parent? | 109 |
| 17 | Churchill the Painter: His Favorite Pastime | 113 |
| 18 | Churchill the Spendthrift: A Weakness | 119 |
| 19 | Conflicting Views of Churchill: How Others Saw Him | 124 |
| 20 | Churchill in Tears: Telling Detail | 131 |
| 21 | Churchill the Drinker: An Alcoholic? | 136 |
| 22 | Churchill in Context: Facts at a Glance | 139 |
| 23 | Churchill and Sex: Too Interesting to Ignore | 147 |
| 24 | Churchill as Husband: A Happy Marriage? | 152 |
| 25 | Churchill's Island Story: His Myth | 156 |
| 26 | Churchill in Photographs: How He Changed Through Time | 161 |
| 27 | Churchill as the Hero of a Novel: The Imagined and the Real | 171 |
| 28 | Churchill's Destiny: How He Saw Himself | 178 |
| 29 | Churchill the Imperialist: His Cause | 186 |
| 30 | Churchill's Empire: How He Saw the World | 195 |
| 31 | Churchill and Roosevelt: Friends as Well as Allies? | 198 |
| 32 | Churchill's Imagination: How He Saw History | 202 |
| 33 | Churchill and Hitler: Nemesis | 211 |
| 34 | Churchill Exposed: Missing Information Supplied | 221 |
| 35 | Churchill True or False: Challenged Assumptions | 226 |
| 36 | The Tragedy of Winston Churchill, Englishman: The Meaning of His Life | 234 |
| 37 | Churchill in Portrait: A Likeness | 242 |
| 38 | Churchill's Last Days: How He Died | 246 |
| 39 | My Churchill: Judgment | 250 |
| 40 | Remember Winston Churchill: Epitaph | 253 |
| Notes | 255 | |
| Select Bibliography | 284 | |
| Acknowledgments | 295 | |
| Index | 297 |
Anonymous
Posted February 2, 2006
Gretchen Rubin has the merit to make the complex personality of Winston Churchill accessible to a wide audience. Rubin is very good at reducing a mass of information and data about her tragic hero to the key talking points about a wide range of topics relevant to the life of Churchill. Some biographies about Churchill can intimidate many readers because of their size and/or complexity. Rubin, a lawyer by training, plays the devil¿s advocate in some chapters by arguing both sides of an issue without taking side. Some readers, understandably, would have preferred that Rubin took a clear stance in these chapters. Although Rubin deeply admires Churchill, she ultimately passes the test of impartiality by acknowledging his most egregious shortcomings.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted September 23, 2012
Chapter 3: Karatepaw awoke to nothing. He walked outside and noticed no scent markers. "They must have moved camps." He said. Then saw a marking in a tree stump that read. 'Wind and fire.' He walked there and saw the new camp. It was so much bigger than the last one. This one had sunningstones and many other things. He trained with blacktail then after that. Something happened. He heard an explosion and then saw at the med cat den. The med cat was dead. The den was destroyed. "What happened!" Mistystar asked. Murmering came from the wariors and he picked up a snicker from out in the woods. The warriors and me went to go see. He sniffed the air and picked up a killer scent. Twoleg with dynamite and a dog. The warriors went looking for it. "Oh my god. Im not risking my life." He said going back to where the apprentices were. He was talking and ravenpaw (srry i forgot to mention the ceremony. :P) said. "No. This is absoloutly horrible. We must never go to where the warriors are unless we are one of them. Im not taking ANY chances here." She said. We all agreed and then a voice spoke from out in the woods. "Weve killed him! The twoleg has fallen!"||||| end of chapter. Chapter four will be in the 5th result. I will make it as soon as i can. Plz rate this chapter!
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Posted January 24, 2009
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Posted December 31, 2009
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Posted July 31, 2010
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Overview
Like no other portrait of its famous subject, Forty Ways to Look at Winston Churchill is a dazzling display of facts more improbable than fiction, and an investigation of the ...