by Boris Johnson (Foreword), Boris Johnson (Foreword), A. Warren Dockter (Editor)
When Winston Churchill was asked by George VI to take the reins of power in May 1940 he later recalled that `I felt as if I were walking with destiny, and that all my past life had been but a preparation for this hour and for this trial.'
Our relationship with the Greatest Briton is similarly framed by this same sense of an inevitable fate. It is difficult, from our perspective, to disentangle the man from the legend that has accumulated around him.
The Telegraph had a uniquely close connection with Churchill following every stage of his career, from his early days as a war correspondent for the paper, through his time in the political wilderness, the turbulent war years and his astoundingly energetic life as an elder statesman. Collected here, for the first time, is the best reportage on this most fascinating of men. Unencumbered by his mythic status, there is praise and blame in equal measure: finding space for both dramatic accounts of his wartime premiership and affectionate reports on the animals living at Chartwell, his country estate.
The Telegraph was also a happy home for Churchill the journalist, and featured within are many pieces written in his unmistakeable prose - he was as comfortable issuing stern jeremiads about the dangers of socialism, or the threat of Hitler's Germany as he was enthusing about painting.
Restoring much of the urgency and freshness to the life of this extraordinary man, Churchill at the Telegraph is a celebration of an intimate relationship that lasted over sixty years and shows Winston Churchill in all his paradoxical glory.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Publisher: Aurum Press Ltd
Published: 28 May 2015
ISBN 10: 1781314527
ISBN 13: 9781781314524
'A celebration of the intimate connection between the war-time Prime Minister and the Telegraph, which shows Churchill in all his paradoxical glory.'
'A fascinating insight into British history as it unfolded and into the man who was at the heart of so much of it.'
'A celebration of the intimate connection between the war-time Prime Minister and the Telegraph, which shows Churchill in all his paradoxical glory.'
'A fascinating insight into British history as it unfolded and into the man who was at the heart of so much of it.'
DR A. WARREN DOCKTER is a graduate of the University of Tennessee and gained his PhD at the University of Nottingham in July 2012. He has taught at the University of Exeter and the University of Worcester and was an Archives By-Fellow at Churchill College. His research interest lies in British Imperialism in the Middle East during the late nineteenth and twentieth century, encapsulating orientalism and trans-national historical approaches.
BorisJohnson is a British politician, popular historian and journalist who has served as Mayor of London since 2008 and as Member of Parliament (MP) for Uxbridge and South Ruislip since 2015. Johnson previously served as the MP for Henley from 2001 until 2008.