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Wilful Murder: The Sinking Of The Lusitania
Wilful Murder: The Sinking Of The Lusitania
Oct 27, 2024 12:22 PM

Author:Diana Preston

Wilful Murder: The Sinking Of The Lusitania

On May 7th, 1915 a passenger ship crossing the Atlantic sank with the loss of 1200 lives. On board were some world-famous figures, including multimillionaire Alfred Vanderbilt. But this wasn't the Titanic and there was no iceberg. The liner was the Lusitania and it was torpedoed by a German U-boat.

Wilful Murder is the hugely compelling story of the sinking of the Lusitania. The first book to look at the events in their full historical context, it is also the first to place the human dimension at its heart. Using first-hand accounts of the tragedy Diana Preston brings the characters to life, recreating the splendour of the liner as it set sail and the horror of its final moments. Using British, American and German research material she answers many of the unanswered and controversial questions surrounding the Lusitania: why didn't Cunard listen to warnings that the ship would be a target of the Germans? Was the Lusitania sacrificed to bring the Americans into the War? What was really in the Lusitania's hold? Was she armed? Had Cunard's offices been infiltrated by German agents? And did the Kaiser's decision to cease unrestricted U-boat warfare in response to international outrage expressed after the sinking effectively change the outcome of the First World War?

Highly readable, meticulously researched, this special centenary edition casts dramatic new light on one of the world's most famous maritime disasters.

Reviews

'The most comprehensive and accessible account of the sinking there has been or perhaps will be'

—— Alan Judd , Sunday Telegraph

'Sets a standard which other books have not achieved'

—— Irish Independent

'A fitting monument to a multiudinous loss'

—— John Updike , New Yorker

'It is not easy, nowadays, to write an original book on the first world war...but Preston has succeeded'

—— Norman Stone , The Sunday Times

'A book as majestic as its subject.  Preston is a consumate popular historian and a stylish and elegant writer'

—— Chicago Sun-Times

'A complex story of heroism and great courage'

—— Independent on Sunday

'Clear and effective...benefits from exhaustive research'

—— The Times Literary Supplement

'Very good...Preston has done an extraordinary amount of work, particularly in tracing the memories of survivors'

—— The Sunday Times

This fascinating book tells the story of World War Two's impact on India: the shattering of the ordered relations which underpinned the Raj making its end inevitable. It's also a much needed reminder of India's contribution to that war

—— Mark Tully

Epic and intimate

—— Aamer Hussein , Independent

Masterly

—— John Keay , Literary Review

[Has] brought undeservedly obscure histories into a powerful and startling light

—— Matthew Price , National

an intricately detailed insight into an underexplored area of wartime history

—— Emma Jolly , Who Do You Think You Are?

[Khan marshals] a dazzling array of first-hand sources – soldiers and politicians, but also non-combatants such as nurses, refugees, peasants and prostitutes – to illustrate the effect the conflict had on South Asian society and politics

—— Saul David, 4 stars , Mail on Sunday

[an] important book

—— Jason Burke , Observer

Khan’s research has been extensive and she combines it with a gift for storytelling. She is at her best and most original in bringing us the revealing perspectives of witnesses other historians might ignore.

—— Zareer Masani , History Today

An exhaustively researched history that uses a dazzling array of first-hand sources to illustrate the effect the Second World War had on South Asian society and politics

—— Saul David , Evening Standard

[Khan] shows convincingly how Indians could no longer be fooled, or fool themselves, that the British presence was either benign or irreversible

—— David Horspool , Guardian

Revelatory study… Khan balances analysis, history and human compassion in a narrative that leaves one shaken.

—— Sunday Telegraph

Khan has written a first class book... Exceptionally well told facts throughout the book, I was staggered at her revelations … It is a bitter, sweet story throughout … Overall, the book enlightened me in many ways, perhaps it makes me regard the Indian in a different light today. It certainly has made me look up other deeper facts about various matters pertaining to the era of the Second World War, and that has to be a good inducement to read the book.

—— Reg Seward , Nudge

A delightful read about the ebb and flow of thoughts in one extraordinary man’s mind

—— Claire Harman , Evening Standard

Drawing on [Aubrey’s] manuscripts and letters, [Ruth Scurr] has fashioned, as chronologically as possible, an autobiography in the form of the diary that Aubrey never wrote. It fits him perfectly… Ms Scurr has done him proud

—— The Economist

Aubrey was a delightful, self-deprecating man ... A conventional biography of Aubrey could easily have become a portrait of the time through which he had lived, allowing the man himself to be overshadowed ... Instead, Ruth Scurr has invented the diary Aubrey might have written, incorporating his own chaotic, sometimes scrappy literary remains to form a continuous narrative. ... lucky him to have been accorded a biography as whimsical as his own self

—— Clive Aslet , Country Life

Scurr’s book illuminates and poignantly captures the voice of a man more often a “ghostly record keeper” in his own writing

—— Carl Wilkinson , Financial Times

John Aubrey brilliantly reconfigures the art of biography

—— David Abulafia , Times Higher Education

Bold and imaginative recreation of the diary of the 17th-century antiquary. It shows how close a scrupulous and unselfregarding biographer can come to the savour of a life

—— Graham Robb , Spectator

A genuinely remarkable work of biographical innovation.

—— Stuart Kelly , TLS, Books of the Year

I’d like to reread Ruth Scurr’s John Aubrey every Christmas for at least the next five years: I love being between its humane pages, which celebrate both scholarly companionship and deep feeling for the past

—— Alexandra Harris , Guardian

Ruth Scurr’s innovative take on biography has an immediacy that brings the 17th century alive

—— Penelope Lively , Guardian

Anyone who has not read Ruth Scurr’s John Aubrey can have a splendid time reading it this summer. Scurr has invented an autobiography the great biographer never wrote, using his notes, letters, observations – and the result is gripping

—— AS Byatt , Guardian

A triumph, capturing the landscape and the history of the time, and Aubrey’s cadence.

—— Daily Telegraph

A brilliantly readable portrait in diary form. Idiosyncratic, playful and intensely curious, it is the life story Aubrey himself might have written.

—— Jane Shilling , Daily Mail

Scurr knows her subject inside out.

—— Simon Shaw , Mail on Sunday

The diligent Scurr has evidence to support everything… Learning about him is to learn more about his world than his modest personality, but Scurr helps us feel his pain at the iconoclasm and destruction wrought by the Puritans without resorting to overwrought language.

—— Nicholas Lezard , Guardian

Acclaimed and ingeniously conceived semi-fictionalised autobiography… Scurr’s greatest achievement is to bring both Aubrey and his world alive in detail that feels simultaneously otherworldly and a mirror of our own age… It’s hard to think of a biographical work in recent years that has been so bold and so wholly successful.

—— Alexander Larman , Observer
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