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Books with author Winston Churchill

  • Savrola: A Tale of the Revolution in Laurania

    Winston Churchill

    eBook (@AnnieRoseBooks, Jan. 26, 2016)
    Savrola: A Tale of the Revolution in Laurania is the only major fictional work of Sir Winston Churchill. The story describes events in the capital of Laurania, a fictional European state, as unrest against the dictatorial government of president Antonia Molara turns to violent revolution.Churchill began writing the novel on his voyage from Britain to India to take part in the Malakand campaign in August 1897. Churchill was on leave from his posting with the army in India when he had news of fighting in Malakand, and immediately arranged to return. The book was started before, and completed after, writing The Story of the Malakand Field Force about his experiences there. He wrote to his brother in May 1898 that the book had been completed. The working title for the book was Affairs of State. It was initially published as a serialisation in Macmillan's Magazine between May and December 1899, and was then published as a book in February 1900. An American edition appeared in November 1899.
  • Memoirs of the Second World War;: An abridgement of the six volumes of the Second World War,

    Winston Churchill

    Hardcover (Houghton Mifflin, March 15, 1959)
    Vintage book
  • The Story of the Malakand Field Force

    Winston Churchill

    Paperback (Dover Publications, March 18, 2010)
    In his first book, the renowned statesman and historian chronicles an 1897 British military campaign on the Northwest Frontier, in the vicinity of modern Pakistan and Afghanistan. Churchill served as a correspondent and cavalry officer in the conflict, and his incisive reportage reflects the energy and vision that re-emerged in his leadership during World War II.At the time of the clash, Churchill was serving as a subaltern in the 4th Hussars. Weary of regimental life, the young soldier drew upon family connections to find a place among the brigades headed for the frontier. There he participated in his first combat in the Mamund Valley, where British troops suppressed a revolt among the region's Pathan tribes. Churchill's series of letters to the London Daily Telegraph formed the basis for this book, which he declared "the most noteworthy act of my life," reflecting "the chances of my possible success in the world." A century later, the towering historical figure's account of military action in this still-volatile region remains powerfully relevant.
  • THE SECOND WORLD WAR

    Winston S. Churchill

    Hardcover (WEIDENFELD & NICOLSON, March 15, 1959)
    This is the abridged version printed by Cassell in London in 1959
  • The New World

    Winston Churchill

    Mass Market Paperback (Bantam, March 15, 1978)
    None
  • The World Crisis: The Complete Set

    Sir Winston S. Churchill

    Paperback (Bloomsbury Academic, March 26, 2015)
    The World Crisis is considered by many to be Winston S. Churchill's literary masterpiece. Published across five volumes between 1923 and 1931, Churchill here tells the story of The Great War, from its origins to the long shadow it cast on the following decades. At once a history and a first-hand account of Churchill's own involvement in the war, The World Crisis remains a compelling account of the conflict and its importance.
  • Savrola

    Winston Churchill

    eBook (, June 8, 2013)
    Winston Churchill was a prolific writer. Published in 1899, when he was just 24 years old, Savrola is the only novel Churchill wrote.The story concerns the events leading up to, during and after a revolution in the fictional European country of Laurania. A fast-paced thriller written near the end of Queen Victoria's reign when Great Britain ruled a worldwide empire, it subtly reveals the political awareness and personal views of a young Churchill, decades before he would become one of the most important figures of the twentieth century. Savrola shows that it is possible to obtain penetrating insights into an author's mind from their fiction as well as from their biography.This is a well presented and formatted ebook with a chapter-based table of contents.
  • Memoirs of the Second World War: An abridgement of the six volumes of The Second World War

    Winston Churchill

    Hardcover (Bonanza Books, March 15, 1978)
    Hardcover book is an abridgement of Winston Churchill's six volume history of World War II.
  • WINSTON CHURCHILL: LEADERSHIP LESSONS: The remarkable teachings from the Last Lion! This giant of the ages can have a lasting impact on your life.

    Michael Winicott, Winston Churchill

    eBook (UNITEXTO Digital Publishing, Feb. 9, 2015)
    Discover the leadership lessons from Winston Churchill that can transform your life! For a wide variety of reasons, Winston Churchill is one of the most fascinating figures of the recent past. His life so definitively embodies the process of becoming a great leader. This book aims at teaching those interested in the subject of leadership learn some of the many lessons Churchill’s life has to offer. It begins with a brief overview of the great man's life story, ranging from the aristocratic, but often challenging, circumstances of his birth and early life to the height of his power and his subsequent decline. It then explains ten especially significant lessons in leadership from that famous life, each springing from the circumstances of a particular stage of Churchill's development and his responses to them. So are you ready to learn from the Winston Churchill´s life? Are you interested in learning about leadership? And most importantly, are you ready to learn about life? All this and more in this fascinating book. Here is a preview of what you will learn…Turn Weakness into StrengthLeverage Every Tool Bounce Back QuicklyStand on PrincipleInnovate to Challenge Conventional Wisdom Regroup and Gain New PerspectivesHold Steady Against Impossible OddsInspire Others to Do and Give MoreForge Relationships With Other LeadersLive a Passionate, Well-Rounded LifeDownload your copy today!Tags: winston churchill autobiography,winston churchill author,winston churchill biography, winston churchill books, winston churchill early, winston churchill gathering storm, winston churchill history of the english speaking peoples, winston churchill humor, winston churchill leadership, winston churchill life story, winston churchill my early life, winston churchill Marlborough, winston churchill quotes. winston churchill speeches, winston churchill second world war, winston churchill the last lion, winston churchill ww2, winston churchill world crisis
  • Savrola: A Tale of the Revolution in Laurania

    Winston Churchill

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Sept. 11, 2018)
    Savrola: A Tale of the Revolution in Laurania is the only major fictional work of Sir Winston S. Churchill. The story describes events in the capital of Laurania, a fictional European state, as unrest against the dictatorial government of president Antonio Molara turns to violent revolution.
  • The Crossing

    Winston Churchill

    eBook (iOnlineShopping, Dec. 17, 2018)
    The Crossing is a 1904 best-selling novel by American writer Winston Churchill. It was the best-selling novel in the United States in 1904, and includes illustrations by Sydney Adamson and Lilian Bayliss. A portion of the book first appeared in December 1903 in Collier's under the title The Borderland.The last of Churchill's sweeping historical novels, the plot concerns the westward expansion of the United States, including the settlement of Kentucky.A stage adaptation written by Churchill and Louis Evan Shipman (who had also worked on the stage adaptation of The Crisis) debuted in 1905 and briefly ran on Broadway in January 1906 for eight performances. One commentator summed up the play's short run as one that "very soon met with disaster."
  • The Crisis

    Winston Churchill

    eBook (AP Publishing House, May 1, 2012)
    Romantic tension develops between the four main characters: one, Virginia Carvel, the fashionable daughter of Comyn Carvel, a southern gentleman of the old school; another, Clarence Maxwell Colfax, her n'er-do-well cousin who becomes a stalwart cavalier in the Southern cause in an effort to win Ginny's approval; the third, Stephen A. Brice, an earnest young lawyer from Boston who antagonizes Virginia by his zeal for Abraham Lincoln's cause; and the fourth, Eliphalet Hopper, a hard-working clerk with ambitions to advance himself both financially and socially.The crisis of the title is provoked by Abraham Lincoln's opposition to the extension of slavery, and the power of his personal integrity to win people to his cause, including the young lawyer, Stephen Brice, who becomes a devoted admirer and proponent following a personal interview on the eve of the Freeport debate between Lincoln and Stephen Douglas. This meeting depicts Lincoln's determination to advance the cause of freedom through the possible (and likely) sacrifice of his own political ambitions, and is related with a very believable combination of rustic humor and political acumen on Lincoln's part.The events prior to Lincoln’s nomination and his eventual election to the Presidency elicit different reactions among the citizens of St. Louis, from the determined antipathy of the Southern sympathizers, to the equally determined patriotism of the population of German immigrants who have fled from their homeland and whose devotion to liberty has caused them to transfer their allegiance to the ideal of American democracy. One of them is Stephen's fellow lawyer, Karl, who bears the scar of a duel fought with broadswords between himself and an arrogant German noble; a duel based on an actual incident in Berlin.Although the personal rivalries follow an almost soap opera style formula, the overall events of the war from the perspective of St. Louis and the Western theater of war are dramatically depicted with well-researched authenticity, and both Grant and Sherman are depicted as having a personal involvement in the lives of the main characters. A pivotal moment in the heroine's life is presented through her transformation from being self-centered and self-absorbed to becoming self-sacrificing and dedicated to easing the suffering of those around her. This is represented as a Christian metaphor for the way that God uses challenges to mould a person's character.Eventually she and the young lawyer find themselves meeting Lincoln together to try to save her cousin's life after Clarence is condemned as a Southern spy, and together they experience Lincoln's power to bring about a reconciliation between them, just before the national reconciliation which Lincoln proposed between the North and the South would be aborted by John Wilkes Booth's bullet.This novel is a story about Abraham Lincoln in the same sense that the novel Ben Hur is "a tale of the Christ," in that Lincoln only appears twice, for a total of about two dozen pages, but his philosophy is a dynamic presence throughout the story. The author portrays Lincoln as being the sacrifice America had to pay to redeem it from the sin of slavery.As a side note: General Lew Wallace wrote Ben Hur partly as a way to revive his reputation in the aftermath of the battle of Shiloh, in which his division played an undistinguished role, marching and countermarching futilely the first day of the battle, the aftermath of which left Sherman so discouraged that he remarked to Grant, "They sure whupped us today!" To which Grant replied, "Yep. We'll whup them tomorrow," and they did.In his post-script, the author offers this apology for supporting Lincoln's point of view, by explaining, "Lincoln loved both the South and the North".Includes a biography of the Author