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Автор: Alison Carlson
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Биографии и Мемуары
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781941758199
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      THE MAN WITHIN

      Copyright © 2015 by Alison Carlson.

      All rights reserved.

      Created by Alison Carlson.

      Edited by Girl Friday Productions.

      Design by Macfadden & Thorpe.

      The punctuation of Churchill’s words may have been modernized to improve clarity.

      Quotations reproduced with permission of Curtis Brown, London, on behalf of the

      Beneficiaries of the Estate of Winston S. Churchill.

      Copyright © The Beneficiaries of the Estate of Winston S. Churchill

      Published by Inkshares, Inc., San Francisco, California.

      Printed in China.

      First Edition

      1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2015933323

      ISBN 978-1-941758-10-6

      (Hardcover)

      THE MAN

      WITHIN

      Winston Churchill

      An Intimate Portrait

      Alison Carlson

      In memory of my father, who steadied and

      calmed all those he loved.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      Preface by Alison Carlson

      Foreword by Randolph L. S. Churchill

      Introduction by Phil Reed, OBE

       Youth1

       Soldier13

       Politician29

       Friends & Family57

       Passions87

       Allies111

       Wartime135

       Leadership161

       Finis181

       Acknowledgments

       About the Author

       Grand Patrons

       Photo Credits

      Churchill returns from

      Casablanca.

      Preface by Alison Carlson

      When I was a child, my parents regaled me with stories

      of World War II – my father became an RAF pilot, and

      my mother was evacuated from Manchester during the

      bombings. During the war, as my parents stood in respect,

      Churchill’s iconic and sonorous voice came to them over

      the radio. It calmed them, empowered them, and wove a

      nation of embattled citizens together. Churchill’s words

      ran deep in the soul of both my parents.

      Standing five feet six-and-a-half inches tall, Churchill was

      a lone player – in his father’s eyes, in school, in Parliament,

      in the press. An outsider and perpetual underdog, he took

      an irrevocably principled stand no matter the odds and

      maintained his initiative with astonishing optimism. For

      me, it is that unshakable, unflagging spirit that is perhaps

      the most remarkable aspect of his personality. Importantly,

      the reservoirs of strength that he crafted over his life – in

      the face of adversity and in his own failures – were what

      steadied my parents, England, and the world.

      Churchill embodied a kaleidoscopic mix of personalities.

      These many facets are not readily captured in the

      photographs with which we are familiar. I have spent the

      last five years poring over photographs in the Imperial

      War Museum, the Churchill Archives in Cambridge, and

      a variety of lesser-known libraries in England, sourcing

      photographs that portray a renewed image, rather than just

      the familiar vision of him: cigar clenched jauntily in hand

      or flashing a V for victory. Many of these photographs have never been published before – photographs which, for better or worse, I alone have chosen. Remarkably, I found no photographs of him drinking, with the exception of one on a boar hunt; clearly, Churchill decided how he would be photographed, and, ergo, perceived.

      It is my hope that the words and images on these pages

      convey a bit of the bedrock strength and comfort of

      Churchill – the strength and comfort that came to my

      parents, and all of Britain, over the radio waves. The world

      is still a scary place, and Churchill, if only in memory, has

      reservoirs of strength yet to impart to us. But this strength

      and comfort should come not just from the unidimensional

      monolith, the thin sliver so often conveyed, but from the mix

      of personalities that comprise the man within – his joyousness

      and sorrow, his pugnaciousness and tenderness, his moral

      certainties and doubts, his strengths and vulnerabilities.

      Considered by many to be the greatest man of the twentieth

      century,