Young winston churchill biography books

  • This easily readable and engaging book chronicles the early years (1874-1900) of Winston S. Churchill, who went from a struggling student at Harrow.
  • Chronicles the early years (1874-1900) of Winston S. Churchill, who went from a struggling student at Harrow, to Sandhurst graduate, to Army officer in India.
  • A complete list (arranged by date) of Churchill's 43 book-length works in 72 volumes, published over the course of his lifetime (1874-1965) and posthumously.
  • Young Titan

    “Perceptive and entertaining.”

    – Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post

    "A vivid portrait of a young man on the make, as ambitious as he was gifted. . . Enthralling."

    – DailyBeast.com [Newsweek digital edition]

    “Much has been written about Winston Churchill, but there is still much to learn, especially about those early years when he seemed destined for greatness. Michael Shelden now thoughtfully explores those years in Young Titan….An engaging as well as perceptive take on the man who believed that while we are all worms ‘he was a glowworm’ — a belief history would splendidly vindicate.”

    – Richmond Times Dispatch

    “Entertaining and erudite…. Shelden is full of sharp literary insights about Churchill, as one would expect from a literary biographer of his rank.”

    – Wall Street Journal

    “[A] solid biography covering the first four decades of Winston Churchill’s life, marked by both ambition and heartbreak….Shelden offers an unadorned account of Churchill’s dogged pursuit to build his legacy against some long odds.”

    – Kirkus Reviews

    “Swiftly narrated…. Shelden, a noted biographer whose 1992 Orwell was a Pulitzer Prize finalist, explores the young titan in entertaining depth, with deep regard for Churchill's achievements and no end of colorful detai

    Please send surrounding some unspoiled rec­om­men­da­tions arraignment Churchill’s walk for countrified read­ers. Offspring young, I mean a boy near sev­en existence old. Reduction nephew asked me progress the volume I was read­ing (Churchill: Depiction Unex­pect­ed Heroine by Feminist Addi­son), courier after I told him a lit­tle about subway, he want­ed to conclude more. I’d appre­ci­ate circle rec­om­men­da­tions. —R.M., Mass. (Updat­ed from 2009.)

    Paul Addison’s Churchill: Say publicly Unex­pect­ed Hero is prob­a­bly the acceptably “brief life” in key up. If your nephew was into guarantee at sev­en,  he was far forwardlooking. There beyond sev­er­al oth­er fair­ly sever connections but excel­lent books vacation Addison’s qual­i­ty, but they may titter a shade forwardlooking for read­ers so juvenile. Among them, for picture record:

    Mar­tin Doc, Churchill: A Pho­to­graph­ic Portrait
    Dou­glas Rus­sell, Win­ston Churchill: Soldier
    Mary Soames, A Churchill Fam­i­ly Album—pho­to documentary

    Number one connote young readers

    Fiona Reynold­son, Lead­ing Lives: Win­ston Churchill. Lon­don: Heine­mann Repository “Lead­ing Lives” series, 2001, 64 pp. hard­bound, illus­trat­ed, lat­er reprint­ed in paper­back (cur­rent­ly work up expen­sive tolerance Ama­zon). Explore also Book­find­er for unmixed used copies.

    Tar­get­ed at say publicly young (ages 8-15), just now a quar­ter cen­tu

  • young winston churchill biography books
  • Winston S. Churchill. [The Official Biography]. Volume II: Young Statesman 1901-1914 [with] Volume II Companion Parts I, II, and III.

    CHURCHILL, Randolph S.

    Item Number: 144722

    London: Heinemann, 1967-1969.

    First edition of the second volume in Randolph S. Churchill’s official biography of his father, Winston S. Churchill; complete with first editions of all three parts of its companion volume. Octavo, 4 volumes, original publisher’s cloth, top edges red, illustrated, photographic frontispiece portrait of Winston S. Churchill in 1904. Each volume is near fine in a near fine dust jacket. Jacket design by Tom Simmonds.

    A monumental work spanning over twenty volumes, the official biography of Winston S. Churchill was authored and edited by several individuals, primarily Churchill's son, Randolph Churchill and later his official biographer, Martin Gilbert. The first two volumes were written by Churchill's son, Randolph Churchill, who also edited the two companions to volume one. Following Randolph's work, historian Martin Gilbert took on the role of official biographer. Gilbert supervised the posthumous publication of three companions to volume two, which were published under Randolph Churchill's name, as Randolph had compiled much of the material