Mirrors of Greatness
Churchill and the Leaders Who Shaped Him
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Narrated by:
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Ethan Kelly
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By:
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David Reynolds
About this listen
A TELEGRAPH BEST HISTORY BOOK OF 2023
‘A highly imaginative and thought-provoking way of exploring the personality of a man who, like him or loathe him, left an indelible mark on our age’ ADAM ZAMOYSKI
Winston Churchill followed his own star. He yearned to be ‘great’, to gain historical immortality. And he did so through deeds and words: his actions as a soldier and politician, gilded by his writings as a journalist and historian.
But Churchill’s path to greatness was also defined by the leaders he encountered along the way – friends and foes, at home and abroad. Men of power such as Hitler and Mussolini, Roosevelt and Stalin, David Lloyd George, Neville Chamberlain and Charles de Gaulle. And the haunting presence of the adored father who had seen nothing of merit in his troublesome son. In these men Churchill discerned greatness, or its absence, in ways that influenced his own career.
This book includes some whom Churchill would not have deemed ‘great’, but who – in our own day – offer alternative mirrors of what that word might mean. Mahatma Gandhi, who infuriated Churchill by exploiting the power of powerlessness. Clement Attlee, whose heretical vision of ‘Great Britain’ was socialist and post-imperial. And his darling Clementine, channelling her ‘pinko’ sentiments to become Winston’s essential helpmate and most devoted critic.
Mirrors of Greatness offers vivid new perspectives on Churchill’s life and work, showing how this unique man – with dazzling gifts and jagged flaws – learned from his ‘great contemporaries’ and what they saw in him.
©2023 David Reynolds (P)2023 HarperCollins Publishers LimitedCritic reviews
‘This book, by a Cambridge academic who has studied his subject over a lifetime perhaps more closely and shrewdly than any other writer, is not a collection of Churchill’s biggest clangers. Instead, it is almost a second volume that Churchill himself never wrote, of his 1937 Great Contemporaries…always shrewd and sometimes brilliant…It includes wonderful anecdotes, some unfamiliar. Even the stories that we know bear retelling’
The Times, Max Hastings
‘A brilliant new portrait of the man who is, for many, still the Greatest Briton … wonderfully illuminating’
Daily Mail
‘Winston Churchill was unique—but that does not mean that he was alone. David Reynolds’ insightful work illuminates much about those towering figures who shaped not only the politics of the first half of the twentieth century, but also helped form the man who was, in the end, the greatest of them all’
Eliot A. Cohen, author of The Hollow Crown
'Erudite. Authoritative. Compellingly written, and with pace and verve. Reynolds reveals much that is new in a gripping narrative history of the Great Man, one that will have you turning the pages into the early hours. It certainly did me. Like all good books, I shall return to this again and again’
Damien Lewis
‘Who inspired Churchill as he rose to the pinnacle of power? And how did he himself seek to mold how history would view him? No one is better placed to address these deceptively simple questions than David Reynolds, and he succeeds splendidly in this magnificent book’
Fredrik Logevall, author of JFK
What listeners say about Mirrors of Greatness
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Alec Sharples
- 06-06-24
Wonderful story
This is a wonderfully researched and written book. I've read many books about Churchill and was fascinated to learn some new and highly insightful things about the great man.
I loved the way that Reynolds wrote the book, taking a unique angle at the way he looked at Churchill which gives it a special place in the pantheon of material on one of the greatest figures in history.
Shame about the narration, though. It was very well-read, clear and well-paced but the pronunciation was truly terrible in parts. Why no one in the production team picked up on it, I have no idea, but please don't repeat the mistake again.
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- Routini
- 08-01-24
Narrator abysmal
It is difficult to understand how a professional narrator can mangle quite so many words and names as does the one for this book. At the end, it means you end up simply waiting for the next howler, and it totally gets in the way of the listening experience.
Here are some words he gets wrong:
Buttressing -to rhyme with distressing
Bete noire - with an acute accent on the second e of bete
Sea of Mum Ara
Tu est fini (rhyming with lest, for a word that doesn’t have a t on the end of it)
Premier to rhyme with Vermeer (which is give him as an American pronunciation if it wasn’t for all the endless other things)
Premiership - ditto
Sciences Po - with the first word read as if it were in basic English
Amour propre with an acute accent on the final e
Schlieffen plan - can’t even remember how he mangled that one
Marlborough - to rhyme with Carl Boro
Pince nez - forget now how he murdered this one
A fay accompli
The Marseilles Ease
Marshall Pet Eng. Then later in the same chapter, Marshall Pet Ay-ng
Clements Ow
The Charm Pelisse (which you walk down in Paris)
These are really not unknown words or proper nouns. the Champs Elysées? There’s a narrator in the world who doesn’t know how to say that? And how can anyone narrating a history book not know how to pronounce Clemenceau? Or Petain? Or the Marseillaise?
I’m not suggesting for a moment he has to say them in French: merely that the basic English pronunciation of the name is well known. Betay noir? Amour propray? For goodness’ sake!
The book itself is enjoyable enough. Not ground-breaking by any means, but an interesting angle on old material. But honestly, the narration is tragic. It’s so off-putting.
Sorry to be harsh. Weirdly, the general pitch and tone of the narration and the words in between are fine. But then these random mid-pronunciations pop up all over the place, and they drive you (well, they drove me!) round the twist.
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