Introduction Wm. Roger Louis, The University of Texas at
Austin
1. How Churchill’s Mind Worked, Paul Addison, Oxford University
2. Éamon de Valera, Kevin Kenny, New York University
3. Calouste Gulbenkian: Mr. Five Percent, Richard Davenport-Hines,
Oxford University
4. Lord Beaverbrook, Jane Ridley, University of Buckingham
5. Evelyn Waugh and Randolph Churchill, Jeffrey Meyers, Biographer
and literary, art and film critic
6. Alan Turing: Genius, Patriot, Victim, Robert King, University of
Texas
7. Louis George Martin: Champion Weightlifter, John Fair,
University of Texas
8. Benjamin Disraeli and Oscar Wilde, Sandra Mayer, University of
Vienna and Oxford University
9. William Morris: Artist, Businessman, and Radical, Peter Stansky,
Stanford University
10. Ida John: Portrait of the Artist’s Wife, Rosemary Hill, Quondam
Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford University
11. Arthur Conan Doyle and Spiritualism, David Leal, University of
Texas
12. P. G. Wodehouse, Joseph Epstein, Author of more than 25 books
including The Ideal of Culture (2018)
13. Samuel Beckett and Surrealism, Alan Friedman, University of
Texas
14. Harry Potter and Bloomsbury, Nigel Newton, Bloomsbury
Publishing
15. A Battle for the Soul of Classics at Oxford, Paul Woodruff,
University of Texas
16. Obedience by the Book, Al Martinich, University of Texas
17. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Elizabeth Baigent,
Oxford University
18. The Problem with Monuments: A View from All Souls, Edward
Mortimer, Oxford University
19. The Social History of the Raj, Max Hastings, Journalist and
author of Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy, 1945-1975 (2018)
20. Warnings from Versailles, 1919, Margaret Macmillan, Oxford
University
21. The British Defense of Cyprus, 1941, George Kelling, Civilian
Historian with the U.S Air Force
22. How the British Left Palestine, Bernard Wasserstein, Author of
several books including The British in Palestine (1978)
23. America Confronts the British Superpower, 1945–1957, Derek
Leebaert, Author and a founder of the National Museum of the U.S.
Army
24. Brexit: An Historical Romance, Geoffrey Wheatcroft, Journalist
and Historian
25. Light Reading for Intellectual Heavyweights, Philip Waller,
Oxford University
Eclectic and enjoyable historical and literary collection from distinguished contributors
The editor, Wm. Roger Louis, is Kerr Professor of English History and Culture and Distinguished Teaching Professor at the University of Texas at Austin, an Honorary Fellow of St. Antony’s College, Oxford, and a past President of the American Historical Association. His books include Ends of British Imperialism (2006). He is the Editor-in-Chief of the Oxford History of the British Empire. In 2013, he was awarded the Benson Medal of the Royal Society of Literature, and in 2016 he delivered the Weizmann Memorial Lecture.
The main pleasure of a book like this is akin to that of listening
to a series of assured after-dinner speakers, highly knowledgeable
about their chosen subject and able to entertain as well as
inform.
*Alan Ross, Times Literary Supplement*
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