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Hero of the Empire

The Making of Winston Churchill

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Hero of the Empire

By: Candice Millard
Narrated by: Simon Vance
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About this listen

Penguin presents the unabridged, downloadable audiobook edition Hero of the Empire by Candice Millard, read by Simon Vance.

'Completely engrossing' Andrew Roberts

From The New York Times bestselling author Candice Millard, this is the gripping true story of one dramatic - and emblematic - year in the early life of Winston Churchill

At the age of twenty-four, Winston Churchill believed that to achieve his ambition of becoming Prime Minister he must do something spectacular on the battlefield. Although he had put himself in real danger in colonial wars in India and Sudan, and as a journalist covering the Spanish-American War in Cuba, glory and fame had eluded him.

Churchill arrived in South Africa in 1899 to write about the brutal colonial war against the Boers. Just two weeks later, he was taken prisoner. Remarkably, he pulled off a daring escape - but then had to traverse hundreds of miles of enemy territory alone. The story of his escape is extraordinary enough, but then Churchill enlisted, returned to South Africa, fought in several battles and ultimately liberated the men with whom he had been imprisoned.

Churchill would later remark that this period, 'could I have seen my future, was to lay the foundations of my later life'. Candice Millard tells a magnificent story of bravery, savagery and chance encounters with a cast of historical characters - including Rudyard Kipling, Lord Kitchener and Gandhi - with whom he would later share the world stage, and gives us an unexpected perspective on one of the iconic figures in our history.

Colonialism & Post-Colonialism Historical Military & War Politicians Politics & Activism Politics & Government Great Britain War Winston Churchill Africa England Military Imperialism Colonial Period British Empire Latin American

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Critic reviews

Completely engrossing (Andrew Roberts)
Combining vivid narrative and original scholarship, Candice Millard reveals how Winston Churchill laid the foundations of his political career during the Boer War. Supremely courageous, flagrantly ambitious and incredibly lucky, young Winston emerges as the authentic hero of this thrilling tale of imperial derring-do (Piers Brendon, Former Keeper of the Archives Centre, Churchill College, Cambridge)
With consummate narrative skill and admirable first-hand research, Candice Millard has added to the canon of great works on Winston Churchill a book essential to a better understanding of his life and personality. Hero of The Empire is both eminently readable and exceptionally informative about the evolution of one of Britain's greatest statesmen (Phil Reed, Director of the Churchill War Rooms)
Using many unpublished sources, she weaves into a nail-biting escape story a larger picture of Africa at the cusp of the 20th century. Her eye for humanising detail, her vivid topographical descriptions and her keen awareness of the realities (and surrealities) of war come together in a truly fascinating book. (Lucy Lethbridge)
A gripping story [that] casts an interestingly oblique light on Churchill's personality, and on a traumatic war. (Lucy Hughes-Hallett)
Ms. Millard also shows, as she has in her previous work, that she has a great ear for quotes - an underrated virtue in writers of history ... Her eye for detail is equally good. (Jennifer Senior)
This is a tremendously readable and enjoyable book ... She aims to retell the story in a thrilling contemporary style for a generation of readers, and in this she succeeds. Most historians will have cause to envy her narrative ability. Her prose gallops along; he short, action-packed chapters often screech to a halt on a cliffhanger. (Alex von Tunzelmann)
Thanks to her formidable storytelling skills, she has succeeded in infusing this familiar narrative with color, excitement and life. Particularly effective is her clear-eyed view of the young Churchill as a bumptious self-promoter whose exploits in Africa were as farcical as they were courageous. (Lynne Olson)
Few can match the originality and narrative power of Candice Millard's elegantly written and surprisingly revealing account of the young Churchill's exploits during the Boer War. (Saul David)
All stars
Most relevant
I couldn't wait to finish this. I knew the story from various sources, including Richard Holmes, Celia Sandys and the great man himself; but this is an excellent book that also includes the story from the point of view of the others, including Churchill's friends and rivals, the Boers and the indigenous population.

The narration is also first class.

Great Addition to Our Knowledge of the Great Man

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I've listened to four hours of the book and there has been very little about Churchill. Instead it deviates in detail to indirectly connected information, for instance - the Boer going off to battle wore a wide brimmed hat with a 'Meerkat tail dark tipped and slightly bushy' and as he walked out the door his wife or mother handed him a linen sack filled with food etc etc.

Perhaps these details may go on to show a direct effect on the making of Churchill but as the book is only 10 hours long I'm going to exchange it for one that sticks to the man himself after all there is plenty enough material to fill a book or two.

Deviates from the title

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