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World War Two
World War Two
Dec 22, 2024 10:08 AM

Author:Norman Stone

World War Two

A pacy, compelling and penetrating account - from the great Norman Stone

'The best short primer on the war in twenty years' Andrew Roberts

Norman Stone's gripping book tells the narrative of the Second World War in as brief a compass as possible, making a sometimes familiar story utterly fresh and arresting. As with his highly acclaimed World War One: A Short History, there is a compelling sense of a terrible story unfolding, of a sceptical and humorous intelligence at work, and a wish to convey to an audience who may well have no memory of the conflict just how high the stakes were.

Reviews

Professor Norman Stone has achieved the impossible; he has somehow written a comprehensive history of the Second World War in just under 200 pages, summarising the entire conflict while leaving out nothing of importance and bringing his lifetime of study of the subject to bear in a witty, incisive and immensely readable way ... Norman Stone has proved yet again that he is one of the most original, witty and powerful British historians writing today

—— Andrew Roberts , Standpoint

The joy and strength of this compact history, besides its trenchancy and, in the publishers' words, the "sceptical and humorous intelligence at work", is its narrative clarity ... a book to clear the mind

—— Allan Mallinson , The Times

Novices will receive a painless introduction, but educated readers should not pass up the highly opinionated prologue and epilogue and the author's trademark acerbic commentary throughout ... Readers of all stripes ... will find plenty to ponder

—— Kirkus Reviews

Ambitious… Fascinating

—— Sunday Times

His shrapnel-like chapters come at you from all angles… [A] most compulsive of survivor’s tales

—— Guardian

An uncompromising story of violence and beauty, searing trauma and a dreamlike circulation between the past and the present… This marvellous memoir is his poetic message, floating gently towards us

—— Joanna Bourke , Sunday Telegraph

Vivid… The war on the ground and the conflict in the head are combined in a work of art

—— Iain Finlayson , The Times

The most haunting book I read this year

—— Lia Mills , Irish Times

My Life as a Foreign Country is brilliant and beautiful. It surely ranks with the best war memoirs I've ever encountered - a humane, heartbreaking, and expertly crafted work of literature.

—— Tim O'Brien, author of The Things They Carried

Contemporary wars are built on the distortion of language, the awful acronyms and euphemisms meant to screen us from the real. But in Brian Turner's extraordinarily capable hands, language is war's undoing, in the sense that these words won't allow absurdity and terror to be anything less than real.

—— Mark Doty

Brian Turner has given us not so much a memoir as a mediation, rendered with grace and wit and wisdom. If you want to know what modern soldiers see when they look at their world, read this book.

—— Larry Heinemann, author of Paco's Story, recipient of the National Book Award.

I love about My Life as A Foreign Country is its weird laugh-out-loud mood, and its in-the-thick-of-it hyper-sensual ability to capture beauty in the midst of terror. In these pages, home-spun truths sit alongside quotes from Marcus Aurelius, Walt Whitman and The Bhagavad Gita. My Life... is the melted-down language of a dream despatch from a capacious-hearted warrior poet.

—— Daljit Nagra

A brilliant fever dream of war’s surreality, its lastingness, its place in families and in the fate of nations. Each sentence has been carefully measured, weighed with loss and vitality, the hard-earned language of a survivor who has seen the world destroyed and written it back to life. This is a profound and beautiful work of art.

—— Benjamin Busch, author of Dust to Dust

Turner’s voice is prophetic, an eerie calm in the midst of calamity - as precise as a bullet, as all-encompassing as the apocalypse. One question echoes through these pages - How does someone leave a war behind, and walk into the rest of their life? My Life as a Foreign Country holds a mirror up to what propels us, over and over, into those wars, and serves as a reminder that, in the end, war is simply about counting the dead. Achingly, disturbingly, shockingly beautiful, in the end.

—— Nick Flynn, author of The Reenactments and The Ticking Is the Bomb

As simultaneously delicate and hard-edged as his poetry.

—— Richard W Strachan , Herald

Turner’s eloquent rendering illuminates both the shared space and the painful divide between poet and soldier, mission and memory, war and peace.

—— Roxanna Robinson , Washington Post

The marriage of [Aubrey’s] words and Scurr’s is so smoothly achieved that I have no idea where one leaves off and the other intervenes

—— Allan Massie , Scotsman

Scurr’s imaginative feat of retrieval has produced a perfect book for dipping into when you want a taste of what it was like to be alive in the 17th century

—— John Carey , Sunday Times

It is a testament to [Scurr’s] skill that you quickly stop thinking about technique and instead slip happily into the company of the character she has created. The wealth of research and the seams between imagination and reality disappear from view. This is truly selfless biography

—— Daisy Hay, 5 stars , Daily Telegraph

A game-changer in the world of biography

—— Mary Beard , Guardian

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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