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The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill: Visions of Glory; 1874-1932

audiobook The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill: Visions of Glory; 1874-1932 by William Manchester in History

Description

The Culture Of Disbelief has been the subject of an enormous amount of media attention from the first moment it was published. Hugely successful in hardcover; the Anchor paperback is sure to find a large audience as the ever-increasing; enduring debate about the relationship of church and state in America continues. In The Culture Of Disbelief; Stephen Carter explains how we can preserve the vital separation of church and state while embracing rather than trivializing the faith of millions of citizens or treating religious believers with disdain. What makes Carter's work so intriguing is that he uses liberal means to arrive at what are often considered conservative ends. Explaining how preserving a special role for religious communities can strengthen our democracy; The Culture Of Disbelief recovers the long tradition of liberal religious witness (for example; the antislavery; antisegregation; and Vietnam-era antiwar movements). Carter argues that the problem with the 1992 Republican convention was not the fact of open religious advocacy; but the political positions being advocated.


#66737 in Books 1984-04-01 1984-04-01Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.20 x 2.10 x 5.40l; 1.63 #File Name: 0385313489992 pages


Review
342 of 352 people found the following review helpful. A Worthy Final VolumeBy RaoulI have been nervously awaiting this book for years. My first encounter with Manchester came when volume one first came out. I was a child; and I went to visit my grandmother (who was in London during the Blitz); she held the book up to show me what she was reading. "The man." she said. "The great; great man."Years later; I read the first two volumes almost in one sitting - couldn't put them down - and have reread large parts of them over the years (every time I looked some piece up I'd find myself sitting down for an hour or two because I couldn't stop). I remember when Finest Hour reported that the trilogy would never be finished: it was like a punch in the stomach.I had my doubts about the ability of another author to write worthily of Manchester; and I was afraid this volume wouldn't measure up. No need to worry: this is every bit as much a page-turner as the last two volumes. It's not QUITE Manchester - I thought I could feel a bit of a difference in style; somehow - and yet it IS extremely good; much better than I had expected.Like the first two volumes; we begin with a preamble ("The Lion Hunted") in which we are (re-)acquainted with the book's subject. There is a certain amount of repetition of material from the two earlier preambles; but much good new material as well. I've read thousands of pages on Churchill; but even I found some good new anecdotes and quotations here. After that we're hurled right into the middle of the most dramatic days of World War Two. The unexpected; catastrophic defeats; the incompetence and perfidy of the people in charge of France - it doesn't take much from a writer to make this an exciting story; and yet I don't think it has ever been told better than this. Really; just what I had hoped for from Manchester himself. If the later parts of the book don't quite keep the same level of excitement; neither do the events they recount.My only complaint is the ending: really; the book just stops. Read the end of volume II: I would have expected Manchester himself to end with a climactic summary; perhaps returning to his major insight from the start: the central significance of Churchill in history is that he was a product of the late nineteenth century who was able to bring the virtues of the era of his formative years to life again at a time when they were needed; and when the British people were not yet too far from them. Actually; I do have one other complaint; and it's with the publisher: the dust jacket doesn't match the first edition dust jackets of the first two volumes. Doesn't look as good on the shelf as I would have liked.All in all; this is a worthy final volume. Manchester himself would be proud; and there can be no doubt that this trilogy would be Churchill's favourite biography. Highly recommended; to fans of the first two volumes and newcomers alike.8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. Vol III from a wonderful series on WSCBy L. FigueroaThis is the last volume in a wonderful series of books on Winston Spencer Churchill. I am almost finished with this last book and have learned quite a bit about the man; the country he loved and lead through one of its most challenging times. When you read about all the people Churchill met and worked with or against you can’t help but want to pick up more books to satisfy your curiosity that the book(s) generate. This book was rather big but well worth it. I don’t understand reviewers who found it boring because of the details – you want the details. The details are written in an engaging style that actually have you wanting to know even more details (e.g. Roosevelt’s history or Stalin’s history outside their relationship with Churchill or his representatives).The book is about more than Churchill who was really a 19th century gentleman in the 20th century trying to keep the British Empire intact. The writing was on the wall when Churchill saw himself lose influence as the two super powers emerged from WWII – the Soviet Union and the USA. I actually felt sorry for him! I also hated him for his myopic view of “brown” people and how they compared to Englishmen but his thoughts and ideas were quite understandable from reading the first two volumes. Was he a great man – he certainly was. Was he flawed – of course – what great man isn’t? The three volumes made learning about Churchill the man who steered; encouraged; and held the mantle for the people and government of England a total delight to read. This third volume was not written by William Manchester and does not have his enjoyable and delightful style of writing but it does hold its own and does a fine job of completing the history of WSC. I cannot recommend this enough for anyone who likes to read; wants the details (e.g. comments from others in their diaries on their feelings about Churchill) augmented by information about the wars and other historical information that took place throughout the life span of the man.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A grand view of the late British Empire and one of its noisiest proponentsBy Barry MeliusThe century just past was a turbulent time and it drew the best and the worst out of many people. In Winston Churchill both aspects appeared frequently. At his worst he was a bigoted;imperialistic;pompous;vituperative windbag. At his best he was brilliant;farsighted;compassionate;heroic and possibly the finest practitioner of the English language since Shakespeare. He had the perhaps dubious fortune of being at the nodal point of so many of the crucial events in the first half of the last century. His life starts at the same time the British empire was reaching its peak and his career climaxed as the empire he loved was desperately over extended;but had one last hurrah before before it returned to being a small country on a small island.To read his biography is to immerse oneself into those times. The only question left is is the author up to the task. A frequent problem with biographers is that they fall in love with their subject. Manchester is certainly guilty of this and he skips over some of what could literally be considered crimes against humanity committed by a cold blooded and Machiavellian Churchill only to turn into a harsh critic a few sentences later. In Churchill's defense I could be writing this in German if not for those flexible morals;but Manchester also pointed out Mahatma Gandhi's principled stand against that same Churchill when it came to Indian self rule which arguably delivered as many people from tyranny as anything Churchill did or stood for. William Manchester had to be passionate about the subject to devote so much of his life to write this three part biography so I give him a passing grade because he seems to have held his tendency to gush somewhat in check. The only test left to pass would be the quality of his writing and on that I have few reservations;The Last Lion is on my short list for best modern biography. William Manchester was a gifted wordsmith and a treasure to armchair historians like me.

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