Author:Robert Harris,David Rintoul
Random House presents the audiobook edition of Selling Hitler by Robert Harris, read by David Rintoul.
Spring 1983: it seemed that one of the most startling discoveries of the century had been made, and that one of the world's most sought after documents had finally come to light - the private diaries of Adolf Hitler.What followed was a fiasco of fakery, greed, the duping of experts, and the exchange of extraordinary sums of money for world-wide publishing rights. But that was just the beginning of the story. . .
A stunning and compelling story of human folly, duplicity and wishful thinking. Brilliantly researched and narrated, Selling Hitler is as fascinating and as telling today as it was forty years ago
—— William BoydSurvival against the odds... [an] amazing story.
—— The SunAn extraordinary story.
—— The GuardianThis story hits hard with nostalgia for a vanished world where pennies counted, housewifery was taught at school and every one pulled together, untied by a common enemy.
—— Sussex LifeAn eloquent study in how quickly the political landscape can change -- and history with it
—— The Economist, Books of the Year 2017A superbly written drama... Shakespeare's research is thorough and he has a novelist's flair for depicting the characters and motives of great and lesser men...Fascinating.
—— Book of the Week , The TimesShakespeare brings both meticulous research and fictional artistry to illuminate the machinery of government under extreme stress and the abrasive conflict of large, self-confident personalities. It's a superb achievement.
—— Ian McEwanRiveting…never less than gripping. But the real delight of its book is the convincing, and often revelatory, portraits of the main protagonists.
—— Evening Standard.Brilliant, meticulous…This scintillating joy of a book — with a military narrative of British shame as well handled as William Dalrymple’s Return of a King, and a treatment of 20th-century British politics, romance, humiliation and desire as grandly realised as Anthony Powell’s great novel sequence….Shakespeare’s narrative is not just more reliable than Churchill’s, but more fun.
—— SpectatorSuperb: far and away the best account of the moment which changed our national life and the world, and filled with extraordinary new details. Shakespeare brings a novelist's eye to the characters he writes about, but it is the extraordinary way he marshals his material, far more extensive than I've come across before, which makes this book quite simply magnificent.
—— John SimpsonEveryone delving into this riveting and rollicking account of the Chamberlain-Lord Halifax-Churchill succession will find special pleasure today in inhaling the rich mix of ambition and weakness, bravery and fecklessness, jealousy and sheer hatred, because the contemporary echoes are loud and irresistible... Nicholas Shakespeare achieves the remarkable feat of bringing tension to an old story by understanding the human drama...He has a novelist’s feel for self-pity, jealousy and ambition. The story of Churchill’s accession to power on the day that Hitler’s armies entered the Low Countries and set course for France has never been infused with so much humanity.
—— James Naughtie , New StatesmanThe most thrilling book I have read for years.
—— Keith ThomasSuperb...Enthralling.
—— Daily TelegraphSuperb: he has pieced together the various sources (sometimes quite different in their accounts) and written what can almost be read as a detective story.
—— Norman Stone , The OldieNicholas Shakespeare's impeccably researched, coherent and revelatory explanation about how Churchill became Prime Minister at the exact time of Hitler's onslaught in the West is totally captivating. It will stand as the best account of those extraordinary few days for very many years.
—— Andrew RobertsMagnificent… The book, though totally anchored in the facts, has a novelist’s eye for feeling and atmosphere
—— iUtterly wonderful… It reads like a thriller
—— Peter FrankopanA superb work of history. Shakespeare has assumed nothing and allowed himself to be guided only by what a patient re-examination of the evidence-some of it new, much of it still surprisingly ill-digested until now- actually reveals. That is being an historian. The fact that he is also a novelist just means that it is very well written too, a thriller, in fact.
—— Simon Green, Professor of Modern History, Leeds UniversityShakespeare is better known as a novelist than as a historian. This may change after his superb account of the under-examined Norwegian campaign, for which alone his book deserves to be read… Shakespeare is excellent in tracing the intricate manoeuvres ahead of the debate between groups of parliamentarians… Enthralling
—— David Lough , Daily TelegraphOne of the very best history books I have ever read.
—— Duff and NonsenseAn eloquent study in how quickly the political landscape can change—and history with it.
—— The EconomistAn 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 IssueIn A Spy Named Orphan Roland Philipps’s description of Donald Maclean’s psychological make-up chimes with what I have always felt about the Cambridge spies (Philby excepted) – namely, that their romance with the Soviet Union partook of patriotism as much as it did of espionage… Philipps makes the story and the slow uncovering of his treachery a gripping narrative and an overwhelmingly sad one
—— Alan Bennett , London Review of BooksA 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**