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Richard I (Penguin Monarchs)
Richard I (Penguin Monarchs)
Sep 19, 2024 8:52 PM

Author:Thomas Asbridge

Richard I (Penguin Monarchs)

'Here is the English sovereign as a crusader, battling on the fringes of the known world; the warrior-king ... imbued with the heart of a lion'

Even within his own lifetime Richard I, dubbed the 'Lionheart', attained a kind of semi-mythical status as a paragon of chivalry, yet his reign is both controversial and full of contradictions. Seeking to reconcile the conflicting evidence, Thomas Asbridge's incisive reappraisal of Richard I's career questions how the memory of his life came to be interwoven with myth.

Reviews

The vividly written and well-researched The Fortress is a masterpiece. It deserves to become a classic of military history.

—— Lawrence James , The Times

If you read one military history book this year, make it Alexander Watson's The Fortress.

—— Tony Barber, Financial Times Summer Books of 2020

Superb, revelatory, haunting ... he brings the suffocating, cataclysmic siege burningly alive ... It is excellent history, a marvellously readable, though tragic, story of its time and of how the clock can be made to turn backwards under siege conditions.

—— Julian Evans , Daily Telegraph

Alexander Watson tells this story beautifully, giving the reader a vivid sense of the city ... His exposure of the breathtaking incompetence of the Austrian high command is both shocking and hilarious; his wit and keen sense of the ridiculous alternate with his evident compassion in describing this black farce ... This is a hugely enjoyable book that anyone seeking to make sense of the dark side of 20th-century Europe would do well to read.

—— Adam Zamoyski , Literary Review

Brilliantly researched and superbly written ... Pryzemysl offered a bleak preview of what was coming: nationalism, anti-Semitism and a whirlwind of hatred. Grim stuff, but magnificently done.

—— Dominic Sandbrook , BBC History Magazine

Marvellous ... Watson uses the fortress city like a jeweller's glass to show how war distorted and transformed the pre-war civilian world ... Watson's splendid book combines great evocative power (and flashes of sharp humour) with the ethical authority of the best history writing.

—— Christopher Clark , The Guardian

Gripping ... Watson's book is an impressive telling of a story almost entirely unknown, and it makes clear how much we have yet to learn about the first world war away from the western front.

—— Mark Mazower , Financial Times

A terribly poignant work that conveys the brutal reality of the time through intimate connection with a young person

—— Kirkus Review

Moving [and] riveting... this epic, layered story of survival serves as an important Holocaust document

—— Publishers Weekly

Elliot Ackerman fought the Long War, and now, with Places and Names, he gives us a searingly honest record of his ongoing effort to make sense of the war. This is, literally, a book of wanderings; Ackerman's sojourns to conflict zones, old battlefields, and muddy refugee camps recall the wanderings of that earlier soldier, Odysseus, as he struggles to come home from war, and, no less than his predecessor, Ackerman finds himself journeying through the shadow world of ghosts and spirits that go by the name of memory. Vivid, profound, restless, and relentlessly probing, Places and Names is destined to become a classic of the Long War.

—— Ben Fountain, author of 'Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk'

Ackerman brings a fiction writer's touch to his reportage. The soldier-scribe is a familiar figure in British narratives of the region, from TE Lawrence to Rory Stewart. Ackerman fits easily into this tradition ... The book shows what it is like to be in the middle of it all - particularly for a young, open-minded and quietly idealistic American.

—— Patrick Bishop , The Telegraph

It is a rare writer who is not afraid to deal with the toughest conflicts, ask the hardest questions, show the darkest side of even heroes, and still manage to renew our faith in humanity.

—— Elif Shafak, author of The Bastard of Istanbul

Elliot Ackerman was a young Marine Corps officer during the battle of Fallujah in 2004. I was an embedded journalist with his unit, which lost 20 men in the first week of fighting. I remember him as clever, direct and sometimes playfully ironic, all qualities on display in his book about what he has seen of war, Places and Names. His account of how he won a Silver Star is gripping, the chaotic reality on the ground contrasting with the po-faced and supremely uninformative official citation. His descriptions of Syria, which he visited as a writer, were so painfully evocative for me that I had to stop reading for a time. His vivid, sparse prose bears comparison to that of Tim O'Brien in The Things They Carried or Norman Lewis in Naples '44; Places and Names has the same clear-eyed view of what war is.

—— Paul Wood , The Spectator

Beautiful writing about combat and humanity and what it means to 'win' a war.

—— Mary Louise Kelly , NPR, All Things Considered

Green on Blue is harrowing, brutal, and utterly absorbing. With spare prose, Ackerman has spun a morally complex tale of revenge, loyalty, and brotherly love ... a disturbing glimpse into one of the world's most troubled regions.

—— Khaled Hosseini, author of The Kite Runner

This novel as a whole attests to Mr. Ackerman's breadth of understanding - an understanding not just of the seasonal rhythms of war in Afghanistan and the harsh, unforgiving beauty of that land, not just of the hardships of being a soldier there, but a bone-deep understanding of the toll that a seemingly endless war has taken on ordinary Afghans who have known no other reality for decades.

—— Michiko Kakutani, New York Times

Elliot Ackerman has done something brave as a writer and even braver as a soldier: He has touched, for real, the culture and soul of his enemy

—— Tom Bissell, (The New York Times Book Review)

Accomplished

—— Prospect

Rich and colourful . . . [there is] a vividness and poignancy that other accounts have lacked

—— Richard Overy , Financial Times

McKay's book is better than narrative history. It is biography, but of place, rather than person. He makes Dresden come alive, before, during, and after the infernal 13th

—— John Lewis-Stempel , Daily Express, *****

A passionate and original account of the Allied bombing of Dresden in 1945, one of the most controversial evens of the Second World War

—— Best Books of 2020: our favourites so far

A weighty and considered investigation of events . . . an excellent book . . . providing a reliable, engaging, informative and, above all, sober narrative of events. The book will enable readers to make up their own minds - should they so desire - on the rights and wrongs of the matter. It is highly recommended

—— BBC History Magazine

This minute-by-minute retelling tackles the big questions, but also - by drawing on the letters and diaries from the Dresden City Archive - never loosed sight of the experiences of people who witnessed, and suffered, the attach first-hand

—— BBC History Revealed, Book of the Month

It's a wonderful book, so absorbing, thoughtful and thought provoking, I didn't want it to end

—— Maureen Waller, author of London 1945: Life in the Debris of War

Bouverie’s well-written Appeasing Hitler aims to provide a timeless lesson on the challenges of standing up to aggression.

—— Jo Johnson , Financial Times

Bouverie has mined an impressive range of sources and quotes from them judiciously. His narrative is lucid, his prose efficient, his put-downs witty… [he] tells an important story well.

—— Lucy Hughes-Hallett , New Statesman

The skill with which Tim Bouverie navigates here through the worlds of politics, officialdom and diplomacy is quite exemplary… his explanations of complex issues are always lucid; his narrative style is thoughtful, unshowy and always a pleasure to read… This is, quite simply, the best book ever to have appeared on this whole subject

—— Noel Malcolm , Oldie

Bouverie’s Appeasing Hitler provides a meticulous picture of a Britain that faced very different problems from our own

—— Thelma Lovell , Catholic Herald

Scrupulously fair, [and a] readable account… [an] excellent book

—— Marcus Tanner , Tablet

Appeasing Hitler…is a staggeringly good account of the build-up to the Second World War… gripping, dramatic and revelatory

—— Christian May , City AM

Bouverie’s prose is fluent and assured throughout. Those in search of an entertaining read will find one… an admirable retelling of traditional history

—— Robert Crowcroft , History Today

An enthralling, nuanced tale… the narrative is absolutely compelling

—— Times Literary Supplement

An elegantly written account by a rising young historian

—— The Times, *Summer reads of 2019*

This is a gripping account of the wishful thinking that led us to the precipice

—— Neil Armstrong and Hephzibah Anderson , Mail on Sunday, *Summer reads of 2019*

There is a sure command of narrative and judgment in faultlessly lucid prose, with subtexts of pathos

—— Bruce Anderson , Spectator

A fascinating narrative on the politics of wishful thinking and the law of unintended consequences in international relations

—— Ali Ansari , History Today, *Books of the Year*

[A] finely researched and well-argued book

—— Daily Mail, *Books of the Year*

[A] phenomenal book

—— William Keegan , Observer

Excellent

—— Andrew Roberts , Wall Street Journal

Excellent and compelling

—— William Leith , Evening Standard
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