Winston's Bandits: Churchill and His Maverick Friends

$29.95
by Mr Adrian Phillips

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Though today he is hailed as one of Britain’s greatest leaders, throughout his career, Winston Churchill was an outsider, accumulating a reputation for bad judgement and untrustworthiness. Only risk-takers and fellow outsiders would back him – but these strong and often feuding personalities proved to be vital to his decision-making in war and peace alike. Winston’s Bandits provides, for the first time, a detailed account of his greatest friendships. These friends were Max Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook, a press baron who craved power but only on his own terms; Frederick Lindemann, later Lord Cherwell, an ascetic and quarrelsome scientist who believed in Churchill’s intellectual genius; Brendan Bracken, an Irishman from a humble background who reinvented himself as a major force in financial publishing and gave Churchill unconditional support; the young Bob Boothby, who would earn notoriety for adventurous sexual conduct and dubious financial dealings; Randolph Churchill, who was often a disappointment and burden to his father; and Duncan Sandys, who reaped the full benefits of being Churchill’s son-in-law in his political career. Together, they were Winston’s bandits. This remarkable book explores how Churchill’s relationships with these forceful and intriguing sparring partners provide the key to understanding his greatest triumphs and disasters. “Winston Churchill had a rare capacity for friendship and Adrian Phillips has unerringly homed in on the close friends who helped him achieve victory in the Second World War. In this well-researched, closely argued and occasionally revisionist book, Phillips goes beyond most conventional accounts by also forensically focusing on the relationships between the friends, too, and especially their feuds. This work is an important addition to the Churchillian canon.” Andrew Roberts, author of Churchill: Walking with Destiny After working for twenty years as an investment analyst in London and Frankfurt,  Adrian Phillips  returned to university to study history, which has been a lifelong passion. His postgraduate thesis investigated the mechanisms of power at the top level of government and considered how major decisions can be taken far outside the regular democratic political process, hidden from public sight. He has put this understanding to full use in his books on the abdication of Edward VIII ( The King Who Had to Go  and  The First Royal Media War ), appeasement ( Fighting Churchill, Appeasing Hitler ) and rearmament ( Rearming the RAF for the Second World War ). He maintains a popular blog, Eighty Years Ago This Week, and appears as a commentator on TV and radio. He is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

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