Author:Christopher Hill
This is the classic life of Cromwell by one of the great radical historians of the English Civil War
'A triumph of complex interpretation and delicious prose ... Hill introduced nuance into the character of Cromwell and the nature of his revolution ... the finest of guides to the man of the times' Tristram Hunt, Guardian
'A humane and imaginative book by a historian writing at the peak of his powers' Ivan Roots, Daily Telegraph
'This is the most intelligent summation we have on Cromwell, and it is written with the grace and power we have come to expect from Hill' J. P. Kenyon, Observer
'One of the finest historians of the age' The Times Literary Supplement
'The dean and paragon of English historians' E.P. Thompson
The master ... Hill is the reason why most of us know anything about the 17th century at all
—— Martin Kettle , GuardianOne of the finest historians of the age
—— The Times Literary SupplementA revelation. . . Alexievich's text gives us precious details of the kind that breathe life into history . . . This is a book about emotions as much as it is about facts. It is not a historical document in the accepted sense. . . and yet ultimately, which historical documents are more important than this?
—— Lyuba Vinogradova , Financial TimesA profoundly humbling, devastating book, it should be compulsory reading for anyone wishing to understand the experience of the war and its haunting legacy in the former Soviet Union
—— Daniel Beer , Literary ReviewThese stories about the women warriors of Mother Russia are a symphony of feminine suffering and strength. . . Read this book. And then read it again
—— Gerard DeGroot , The TimesAstonishing. . . Her years of meticulous listening, her unobtrusiveness and her ear for the telling detail and the memorable story have made her an exceptional witness to modern times. . . This is oral history at its finest and it is also an essay on the power of memory, on what is remembered and what is forgotten
—— Caroline Moorehead , GuardianOne of the most heart-breaking books I have ever read. . . I urge you to read it
—— Julian Evans , Daily TelegraphThe least well-known wonderful writer I've ever come across
—— Jenni Murray , BBC Radio 4 Woman’s HourAs with her other books, terrifying documentation meets great artfulness of construction
—— Julian Barnes , Guardian, Summer ReadingGroundbreaking. . . a mosaic of Russian women's stories - from the home front to the front lines, from foot soldiers to cryptographers to antiaircraft commanders
—— ElleAlexievich's artistry has raised oral history to a totally different dimension. It is no wonder that her brilliant obsession with what Vasily Grossman called "the brutal truth of war" was suppressed for so long by Soviet censors, because her unprecedented pen portraits and interviews reveal the face of war hidden by propaganda
—— Antony BeevorThe Belarusian writer has spent decades in listening mode. Alexievich put in thousands of hours with her tape recorder across the lands of the former Soviet Union, collecting and collating stories from ordinary people. She wove those tales into elegant books of such power and insight, that in 2015 she received the Nobel prize for literature
—— Shaun Walker , GuardianAlexievich's "documentary novels" are crafted and edited with a reporter's cool eye for detail and a poet's ear for the intricate rhythms of human speech. Reading them is like eavesdropping on a confessional. This is history at its rawest and most uncomfortably intimate. . . The book is not merely a corrective to male-centred accounts of conflict; it is a shattering and sometimes overwhelming experience
—— Andrew Dickson , Evening StandardA remarkable collection of testimonies. . . Sitting at kitchen tables, Alexievich coaxes out of the women stories that describe a reality vastly different from the officially sanctioned version
—— New YorkerMagnificent. . . After decades of the war being remembered by 'men writing about men,' she aims to give voice to an aging generation of women who found themselves dismissed not just as storytellers but also as veterans, mothers and even potential wives. . . Alexievich presents less a straightforward oral history of World War II than a literary excavation of memory itself
—— New York Times Book ReviewA powerful and deeply moving document . . . giving voices to the women who served alongside their male counterparts only to have been rendered invisible, afterward, through sexist societal and bureaucratic systems
—— ViceReveals the harrowing, brave, and even quotidian memories of Soviet women whose voices were nearly stifled by the mores of history. These accounts fight our ingrained ideas about what makes a war story
—— Sloane Crosley , Vanity FairThe exploitation of the memory of the war has been the central element of modern Russian ideology. It is what makes Ms Alexievich's work so relevant today
—— EconomistA landmark in the study of female soldiers. . . Alexievich's method is the close interrogation of the past through the collection of individual voices; patient in overcoming cliché, attentive to the unexpected, and restrained in exposition, her writing reaches those far beyond her own experiences and preoccupations, far beyond her generation, and far beyond the lands of the former Soviet Union
—— Timothy Snyder, author of On TyrannySvetlana Alexievich rightly says she is a writer, not a historian. In her hands, the spoken word, even written down, conveys the vividness of individual experience, for it has the power of witness
—— GuardianWe should resolve to read this book alongside the world news report. . . Ms. Alexievich never tries to simplify. . . Refusing to pass judgment, crediting all, she listens, suffers and brings to life
—— Wall Street JournalAn absorbing account of how events 1,300 miles away across the North Sea let to the most drastic cabinet reshuffle in modern British history... Shakespeare's book grips the attention from beginning to end. He conjures the characters and personalities of the senior commanders in the Norwegian campaign with a novelist's flair and eye for detail.
—— Ian Thomson , ObserverThe most prescient book of the year
—— Ricky Ross , Big IssueThis book’s fascination is as a joint portrait of the royal couple, the most human of historical actors in England’s greatest political drama.
—— Rebecca Fraser , The TabletA highly intelligent, fair and sympathetic biography.
—— Allan Massie , The Catholic Herald[ An] absorbing biography of Charles I
—— The TelegraphThis is a striking insight into both developing contemporary thought and religious controversies
—— Terry Philpot , The Tablet, **Books of the Year**White King is a lively attempt to make him [Charles I] flesh and blood
—— Robbie Millen , The Times, **Books of the Year**