The Roar of the Lion: The Untold Story of Churchill's World War II Speeches
Autor Richard Toyeen Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 feb 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198715450
ISBN-10: 0198715455
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 8pp black and white plates
Dimensiuni: 135 x 215 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198715455
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 8pp black and white plates
Dimensiuni: 135 x 215 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Richard Toye's detailed and thoughtful exercise in listener reception is ... both overdue and highly welcome.
I never expected even to like this book, never mind nominate it as one of my paperback reads of the year. But it's possibly one of the most surprising histories I've ever read ... Essential reading.
The evidence is rich and varied, but the genius of Churchill's wartime writing shines through.
Thoroughly researched, readable and fascinating.
[Richard Toye] provides a nuanced and discriminating account of the pivotal episode in Churchill's career.
The Roar of the Lion is a thoughtful and thought-provoking book.
Toye writes lucidly, and there is no sense of repetition in the book, which forensically examines one speech after another... [There] are still a lot of new aspects of Churchill's life to be explored. Toye has found one with this first ever, comprehensive, archival based study of WSC's splendid wartime speeches.
The book explores enemy and neutral responses, as well as how the speeches were written. In doing so, it offers a nuanced portrait of a key facet of Churchill's war leadership.
The main strength of The Roar of the Lion lies in its patiently researched microhistories of the speeches. Toye pinpoints the contexts in which they were written, the calculations that lay behind them, and their reception not just at home but also overseas.
[Toye is] one of Britain's leading historians and a man sympathetic to, but not subsumed by, the Churchill of lore and yore.
Thought-provoking ... a useful corrective to the legend. Not only was there a larger variety of responses to Churchill's oratory than usually imagined, but sometimes Churchill's speeches actually depressed, rather than exhilarated. Nor did praise for his wartime oratory mean that people thought Churchill would be the best person to lead the nation after victory, as the 1945 election showed. Good military news, as Toye's evidence makes clear, was always a more invigorating tonic than the most inspirational rhetoric.
Toye's analysis of audience figures and personal diaries provides a fascinating insight into how the British public received Churchill's now much revered wartime speeches.
The details make this book a joy to read for speakers and speechwriters alike.
The Roar of the Lion is a valuable addition to the study of Churchills wartime premiership and demonstrates that there is still much to say about the man and his work.
Toye weaves all this skillfully together to provide the most nuanced assessment yet of the impact of Churchill's rhetoric.[...] Highly recommended.
I never expected even to like this book, never mind nominate it as one of my paperback reads of the year. But it's possibly one of the most surprising histories I've ever read ... Essential reading.
The evidence is rich and varied, but the genius of Churchill's wartime writing shines through.
Thoroughly researched, readable and fascinating.
[Richard Toye] provides a nuanced and discriminating account of the pivotal episode in Churchill's career.
The Roar of the Lion is a thoughtful and thought-provoking book.
Toye writes lucidly, and there is no sense of repetition in the book, which forensically examines one speech after another... [There] are still a lot of new aspects of Churchill's life to be explored. Toye has found one with this first ever, comprehensive, archival based study of WSC's splendid wartime speeches.
The book explores enemy and neutral responses, as well as how the speeches were written. In doing so, it offers a nuanced portrait of a key facet of Churchill's war leadership.
The main strength of The Roar of the Lion lies in its patiently researched microhistories of the speeches. Toye pinpoints the contexts in which they were written, the calculations that lay behind them, and their reception not just at home but also overseas.
[Toye is] one of Britain's leading historians and a man sympathetic to, but not subsumed by, the Churchill of lore and yore.
Thought-provoking ... a useful corrective to the legend. Not only was there a larger variety of responses to Churchill's oratory than usually imagined, but sometimes Churchill's speeches actually depressed, rather than exhilarated. Nor did praise for his wartime oratory mean that people thought Churchill would be the best person to lead the nation after victory, as the 1945 election showed. Good military news, as Toye's evidence makes clear, was always a more invigorating tonic than the most inspirational rhetoric.
Toye's analysis of audience figures and personal diaries provides a fascinating insight into how the British public received Churchill's now much revered wartime speeches.
The details make this book a joy to read for speakers and speechwriters alike.
The Roar of the Lion is a valuable addition to the study of Churchills wartime premiership and demonstrates that there is still much to say about the man and his work.
Toye weaves all this skillfully together to provide the most nuanced assessment yet of the impact of Churchill's rhetoric.[...] Highly recommended.
Notă biografică
Richard Toye was born in Cambridge in 1973. He studied at the Universities of Birmingham and Cambridge, and is currently Professor of Modern History at the University of Exeter. His books include Lloyd George and Churchill: Rivals for Greatness (2007), Churchill's Empire: The World that Made Him and the World He Made (2010), and Rhetoric: A Very Short Introduction (2013, also published by Oxford University Press). He lives in Exeter with his wife and their two sons.