by Dr Graham Stewart (Author)
What were the political machinations that kept Neville Chamberlain in office during the 1930s and deliberately kept Winston Churchill out? Burying Caesar takes us into the thick of the battle for control of the Tory party in the 1930s. Winston Churchill and Neville Chamberlain were two giants of the political stage who were the sons of men who had decisively shaped the politics of the previous era. Burying Caesar charts the course plotted by both Churchill and Chamberlain in their ambition to win the greatest prize in British politics, which had eluded both their fathers. Burying Caesar is a gripping account of the mechanisms and motivations that underpin politics in Britain.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 533
Edition: New Edition
Publisher: Phoenix
Published: 02 Mar 2000
ISBN 10: 0753810603
ISBN 13: 9780753810606
Book Overview: To be reissued alongside Graham Stewart's new hardback, Friendship and Betrayal Burying Caesar is the result of rigorous archival research and fresh analysis from a young historian who has spent seven years on the project 'The author is such a good historian that he avoids hagiography and demonology, without being boring. It is his remarkable achievement to have written a fascinating, lively account of British politics in the 1930s' John Grigg, The Times '[Stewart is] clearly an important political historian in the making' Giles Foden, Guardian 'Combining years of patient scholarship with imaginative insight and literary flair, Burying Caesar is a most impressive debut' Paul Addison, Times Literary Supplement