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Damn' Rebel Bitches
Damn' Rebel Bitches
Oct 5, 2024 1:46 PM

Author:Maggie Craig

Damn' Rebel Bitches

'A racily written, well-researched and heart-warming account' Scots Magazine

Too many historians have ignored the role of women in the '45.

This book aims to redress the balance.

Damn' Rebel Bitches takes a totally fresh approach to the history of the Jacobite Rising by telling fascinating stories of the many women caught up in the turbulent events of 1745-46.

Drawn from original documents and letters, Maggie Craig brings their stories to life in this often touching and always engrossing reframed history.

'A modern classic' The Herald

'Bold and argumentative...resounds with authority' Scotland on Sunday

Reviews

[An] excellent book... [Kelly] sheds light on a little considered aspect of the war

—— Patrick Bishop , Daily Telegraph

A moving tribute to moral courage, and a scholarly memorial of more innocent times

—— Allan Mallinson, Spectator

[Battles of Conscience] takes five pacifists...and skilfully weaves their stories into a broader narrative about how claims of conscience ruled the lives of the 60,000 British citizens who stood apart as conscientious objectors through [WWII]

—— Times Literary Supplement

[An] intriguing, original book... Kelly makes a fair case for...[the] importance in thinking through the collective and individual duties of citizens in a national public emergency

—— Literary Review

An intriguing, original book . . . Kelly is sympathetic towards but clear-eyed about his cast of characters . . . [and] their importance in thinking through the collective and individual duties of citizens in a national public emergency . . . questions which are hardly irrelevant in an age of pandemics, lockdowns and vaccine mandates

—— Alan Allport , Literary Review

Tobias Kelly's scholarly examination of British pacifism neatly addresses the gap between past reality and current historical narrative. Much more has been written about the (far fewer) conscientious objectors who refused to fight in the First World War than those in the Second . . . This says a great deal about how we remember the 1939-45 conflict. Widely regarded as the right war to fight, there seems to be little space for pacifists in discussions of the war against the Axis . . . The timing of this book seems to be particularly prescient, arriving in the middle of another conflict - sparked by Russian's invasion of -- in which freedom and oppression are clearly delineated. What do pacifists do in such circumstances? And how should the state treat them?

—— Tessa Dunlop , History Extra

Tobias Kelly's book takes five pacifists, four men and one woman, and skilfully weaves their stories into a broader narrative . . . A long and proud tradition of being permitted to act according to conscience is very much part of Britain's self-image . . . that there was space for pacifists to lay claim to the values of sacrifice and citizenship while not taking up weapons, ultimately played a not insignificant role in Britain's record of tolerance

—— Mark Bostridge , Times Literary Supplement

This is a sympathetic and nuanced study that challenges the overly simplistic wartime narrative that pervades British culture

—— History Today

The authors effectively prove their thesis in a key volume for World War II history collections.

—— Michael Farrell , Library Journal

On the bicentennial of the Greek revolution, a prominent scholar tracks the historical detail and enormous international significance of the improbable, largely grassroots uprising against the Ottoman Empire. Mazower, a Columbia professor and winner of the Wolfson Prize for History who has written extensively about Greece and the Balkans, ably ties together the many disparate threads of this complex history of Greek independence. ... An elucidating history that is relevant to understanding the geopolitics of Greece today.

—— Kirkus Reviews

There are lessons in the approach to leadership taken by the military that apply to business and other walks of life . . . the principles set out here are worthy of attention

—— Roger Trapp , Forbes

'Daniel James Brown tackles this important story with the same impressive narrative talent and research that made The Boys in the Boat, an enduring bestseller ... The centerpieces of Facing the Mountain are the wrenching, on-the-ground descriptions of battles fought by the 442nd in Europe... every reader will admire the resilience that allowed these soldiers to create communities within the internment camps and to play such a pivotal role in the defeat of the Nazis'

—— BookPage

'Facing the Mountain is more than just the story of a group of young men whose valor helped save a country that spurned them, it's a fascinating, expertly written look at selfless heroes who emerged from one of the darkest periods of American history - soldiers the likes of which this country may never see again'

—— NPR

'Brown combines history with humanity in a tense, tender and well-researched study of the lives disrupted and disregarded by misperceptions and misinformation. Ain't no mountain high enough to keep young men such as Rudy Tokiwa of Salinas; 'Kats" Miho of Kahului, Hawaii; Fred Shiosaki of Spokane, Wash.; and Gordon Hirabayashi of Seattle from doing what is morally right'

—— San Francisco Chronicle

'Rich storytelling and deep historical research about the Japanese American experience are the essence of Facing the Mountain. Although the book graphically describes the horrors of battle, it spotlights stories of heroism and endurance'

—— Christian Science Monitor

Essential reading for anyone wishing to understand political ambition and the role of narcissistic leaders and scheming courtiers in any age

—— ROBERT PESTON, Political Editor ITV News

Gripping, novelistic ... brisk and muscular ... written in a sure-footed historical present, the book creates a simulacrum of the 16th century through the painstaking accumulation of attested details ... [giving] the book its vividness and energy ... [De Bellaigue] writes with supreme confidence about power, diplomacy, clothing, avarice, war, statecraft and the exceptional brutality of the era ... While The Lion House unfolds like a novel, through scenes rich with authenticating detail

—— Marcel Theroux , The New York Times Book Review

De Bellaigue is a riveting and expert guide to the story of Suleyman's quest for power

—— PETER FRANKOPAN, author of The Silk Roads

Narrated with a verve and flair that make the characters burst from the pages. Outstanding history and an incredibly good read

—— EUGENE ROGAN, author of The Fall of the Ottomans

Exquisite ... So arresting is this book, so enveloping in the tensions of its narrative, that most readers will feel a pang of sorrow that the tale does not run on. The Lion House leaves us with a tease, or taunt: "Who, apart from God, can say what will come next?" A sequel, surely. Although it was the peak of the Ottoman Empire, Suleyman's reign also offers clear glimpses of a great decline to come. Who better to tell us about it than Mr de Bellaigue?

—— Wall Street Journal

Non-fiction with the readability of a thriller. Unputdownable

—— VICTORIA HISLOP, author of The Island

Sensuous and scholarly, meticulously researched and deliciously irreverent, The Lion House is an intoxicating journey through the Ottomans' golden age

—— AMBERIN ZAMAN, correspondent, Al-Monitor, Turkey correspondent for the Economist (1999-2016) and Fellow of the Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, DC

Reads like the most gripping fiction ... could very well be Netflix's next epic

—— Radio Times

The Lion House presents a historical universe that captivates and astonishes and is near-impossible to put down. A superb example of historical literature and research

—— RICHARD WHATMORE, Professor of Modern History at the University of St Andrews

Full of breath-taking events at the cross-roads of empires at a moment in history when notions such as Europe, Asia, Christianity and Islam were infinitely more fluid and permeable than they are today

—— KEREM OKTEM, Professor of International Relations at Ca' Foscari University, Venice

Original... de Bellaigue... offers a vivid presentation of events, re-imagined as scenes and episodes... a different, literary kind [of history]

—— Noel Malcolm , Times Literary Supplement

De Bellaigue writes with impecable scholarship, piecing together contemporary accounts to create a thrilling narrative

—— Church Times

De Bellaigue is an expert stylist, sensitive to rhythm and vocabulary, and passionate in his pursuit of the fugitive detail that gives meaning to a whole episode

—— Literary Review

An exhilarating read

—— Rose Shepherd , Saga Magazine

An engrossing book... This is history turned into drama and poetry, awesomely spectacular yet also intensely intimate

—— Yasmin Alibhai-Brown , iNews

The world of Suleyman the Magnificent...is brought to life in this history

—— The Times, *The Year’s Top 50 Non-Fiction Books*

Clearly written, full of empathy for everyday life, which is far too seldom taken into consideration... You devour it like a novel.

—— Welt am Sonntag

A popular work of non-fiction in the best sense.

—— Die Zeit

The Siege of Loyalty House ... tingles with a discerning historical imagination

—— Spectator, *Best Books of 2022 II*

[A] thrilling tale of war

—— Mail on Sunday

[A] gripping tale of a royalist house standing its grown against the Roundheads ... Atmospheric, unflinching, and at times extraordinarily witty

—— UK Daily News, *Best History and Politics Books of 2022*

[A] poignant book... the story is timeless

—— Economist, *Books of the Year*

Compelling

—— Spectator, *Books of the Year 2022*

Exhaustively researched and beautifully written, [The Siege of Loyalty House] tells the story of the epic two-year siege of Basing House, a royalist mansion finally captured by Oliver Cromwell in 1645.

—— Daily Express, *Books of the Year 2022*

When you are as good a writer as Jessie Childs, and as assuredly immersed in the archives, the pages zing with the technicolour of celluloid. ... [A] masterpiece.

—— Critic, *Non-fiction books of the year 2022*

Childs writes an engrossing, spellbinding narrative while laying out a clear and comprehendible history

—— New York Journal of Books

The broad subject of this poignant book is what happens to people during civil war: how quickly and imperceptibly order becomes chaos and decency yields to cruelty. In other words, how close to inhumanity humanity always is. The focus is on an episode in the English civil war, but the story is timeless

—— Economist

A gripping account of the agony at Basing, The Siege of Loyalty House is also a potted social history of the civil wars and how they started. Jessie Childs, [is] a gifted storyteller

—— London Review of Books
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