âAn interesting and at times surprising account of Churchill's tastes as a reader . . . [Rose] is a very good stylist. He is also formidably knowledgeable, and many of his nuggets will be new even to Churchill junkies.ââBen Downing, <i>Wall Street Journal</i><br /><br />âImmensely enjoyable . . . marvelous . . . This gracefully written book is an original and textured study of Churchillâs imagination.â âMichael F. Bishop,<i> Washington Post</i><br /><br />âA most wonderful book for Churchill admirers . . . fascinating . . . the book sparkles and is the best I have ever read on the man.ââTom Perkins, <i>Wall Street Journal</i>, âBooks of the Yearâ<br /><br />'One of the most remarkable books ever written about Winston Churchill.'âPiers Brendon, <i>Literary Review</i><br /><br />âJonathan Rose. . .has shown how Churchill excelled in the application of language to the exercise of power and concludes that he 'modelled his politics on literature.' The proof is abundant and well presented in this excellent, thorough and enjoyable biography that adds a fresh and fascinating dimension to a great statesman.ââLawrence James, <i>The Times</i><br /><br />âThis is no incidental postscript to the hundreds of volumes already published about Churchill, but a painstaking study building a formidable case for taking him seriously not just in political history but in literary history too. . .Rose made his reputation as the historian of the working-class autodidacts in Britain. Now he has consolidated it by writing about an upper-class autodidact, whose intellectual life he captures well.â âPeter Clark. <i>The Financial Times</i><br /><br />â[Rose] assembles a mass of fascinating information about Churchillâs writings, readings, and politicking, much of it until now available only in the archives at Churchill College.ââCita Stelzer, <i>TLS</i><br />âRose hopes to be breaking new ground in the multitude of books on Churchill and provides us with another highly readable account of the man in the course. Bugger Boris, read Rose.ââStewart Rayment, <i>InterLib</i>.<br /><br /><br />âThe result of Roseâs careful scholarship is an absorbing account of the complicated overlap between aesthetics and politics. Churchill emerges as a figure largely unable to separate his reading, writing, political decisions and political self-presentation, such that, to use Roseâs closing words, Churchillâs life âdemonstrates that literature matters, more than we think, in more ways than we imagine.âââNeil E. Hultgren, <i>British Studies</i>.<br /> <br /><br />âIncredibly enough, considering the vast existing literature on Churchill, a sufficient number of aspects of his life remain unexplored to enable a gifted author like Professor Rose to present us with this suberb hefty volume.ââAntoine Capet, <i>Cercles</i>.<br /> <br /><br />âAfter the millions of words that have been written about Winston Churchill, Jonathan Rose still finds a new angle from which to approach him.ââAlaistair Mabbott, <i>Glasgow Herald</i>, <br /> <br /><br />âPainstakingly researched and immensely readable, this in-depth study offers a new perspective on a complex personality and national hero, drawing a picture of a man whose sense of the dramatic changed the course of history.ââ<i>Good Book Guide</i>.<br /> <br /><br />The 2016 New Jersey Committee for the Humanities Book Award in the scholarly humanities non-fiction cateogry.<br /><br />'Lucid, insightful, and authoritative, <i>The Literary Churchill </i>reveals in rich detail how a great political life was shaped by a love of books, a theatrical flair and a brilliant talent for turning a phrase. Unlike many politicians then or now, Churchill believed that literature mattered, and as this book demonstrates convincingly, his deep commitment to the world of the imagination influenced his career at every important turn.' - Michael Shelden, author of Young Titan: <i>The Making of Winston Churchill</i><br /><br />
'One of the most remarkable books ever written about Winston Churchill.'âPiers Brendon, <i>Literary Review</i>
- Piers Brendon, Literary Review