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R**N
He mastered the English language.
First published in 1930, Winston Churchill's memoir, "My Early Life, 1874 - 1904", is mainly an account of his getting into trouble, getting back out, and writing about it. He developed skill at all three endeavors, especially the writing which, along with a speaking tour, became his primary source of support as a young man. He was a war correspondent for the Morning Post in London for many years, and published a dozen volumes beginning with "The River War" about a conflict along the Nile, and ending with a Nobel Prize in Literature.He recognized as a schoolboy that he was hopelessly unable to learn Latin and Greek, and so he was consigned to the study of English, considered a lesser scholastic endeavor. Two effects resulted: one, he was not able to enter Cambridge or Oxford without the classical languages, and two, he became very good with his native tongue.Denied the universities, he sought and won a commission in the Army, serving in a cavalry division. His first real military foray was in Egypt, then on to India, and finally he served in the South African Boer war of 1899. These adventures make up the bulk of the memoir.His capable renditions of these events, published as a column in the Post, were quite popular. When he finally returned to civilian life he had a ready audience for his talks and speeches. He really is good at spinning a yarn; his memoir quickly becomes a page-turner, and it was very popular at the time it was published. I found it most enjoyable too.In all these battles a great deal of ordinance was fired in Winston's direction, but none of it hit him. This fact alone renders his stories with a sort of Hollywood Western gloss, and certainly heighten the reader's attention.Probably the most riveting tale was of his capture by the Dutchman, Louis Botha, who could easily have shot him and let it go at that, but didn't and became a lifelong friend. Botha turned Churchill over to a Boer prison, from which Winston soon escaped. The escape tale involves a coal mine labyrinth, a lot of worrying and waiting, and some freight trains, one carrying coal sacks, and another great bales of wool.From today's viewpoint Winston was clearly a shameless imperialist and racist, pretty normal for the British of the time. There doesn't seem to be any malice in it, just ignorance. He was always an enthusiastic servant of Empire; though he did examine the best course of British action from the viewpoint of the colonized, he never escaped his imperialist assumptions.While on his lecture tour he chanced to have a conversation with Mark Twain which turned to the recent war with the Boers. Churchill notes that Twain deftly, by socratic method I suppose, forced Winston into an uncomfortable corner, where he was saying "My country right or wrong." Twain replied, "When the poor country is fighting for its life I agree. But this was not your case." I think Clemens had the sharper wit.Churchill was showered with honors in his senior years. After his name come no less than seven titles: "KG OM CH TD DL FRS RA", just the beginning of a much longer list of recognitions.What drove him to greatness? Well, he was born into a noble family, a very accomplished and well positioned British father, Lord Randolph Churchill, MP, Exchequer, etc., and a smart, wealthy, and attractive American mother. Yet neither of them gave Winston much in the way of affectionate support as a child. So he felt orphaned in this splendid family, a situation that is often a spur to excel. Yet later, as a young man, he had a great deal of support from his mother who was always pulling strings for him, and from his late father's friends who were a very powerful group.Winston used all this support to get himself placed in army positions where he did his best. He spent his off hours in India, about five hours every sweltering midday, reading himself much of an education that he had missed by not going to university. When you add to all this his war correspondence for a growing readership, you have a man who could win election to Parliament, and did. The rest is history.
S**.
A manual on how to achieve greatness
This is a humorous and honest account that reveals why Churchill rose to the heights that he did. It is obvious he was imperfect (as we all are) and certainly carried the prejudices and conceits of his time and class. His childhood by no means was predictive of the greatness to come. In all the humorous accounts, it is painfully obvious he was a lousy student who apparently did not even finish school! His father correctly anticipated that he couldn't make it to the university. While Churchill had an affinity for the army since childhood, it took him all of three attempts to make it in. And even during the final attempt, he barely squeaked through at the bottom, because the more successful candidates preferred infantry to the expensive cavalry, which Churchill agreed to join. Churchill comes to his own in India where he not only set about to make up for lost time by reading voraciously, but grabbed every opportunity that came his way. Where there was none, he created the opportunity using all means (and they were not insignificant!) at his disposal. By sheer enthusiasm and tenacity, he became the person who was repeatedly in the right place at the right time.Churchill certainly does not portray himself as some super natural or extraordinarily gifted individual. It is a very readable account of persistence, courage (despite at times frankly admitted fears) and carrying on despite adversity. Along the way, we learn of his romantic notions and misguided enthusiasm for war being transformed through bitter experience. For all his opportunism, Churchill also had the courage to openly condemn the less than stellar conduct of his superiors, much to his own detriment (it most probably cost him a VC).It is the authenticity of his account written with good humor, that makes this autobiography so readable. While Churchill had the advantages of his social position, there were many others far better placed who couldn't achieve half as much. It confirms that most humans are capable of achieving greatness, if they would apply themselves and a little bit of luck smiles upon them. My only criticism is that the book ends abruptly, as if Churchill had a deadline to meet. Or, he simply got tired of the whole thing!
P**R
Very much worth reading. The more the world changes, the more it remains the same!
Good Old Winston, “Winnie” to his closest friends - at his very best as writer and politician. Royalist by close lineage, and pragmatist politician by personal confident accomplishment, you can just sense his tongue pushing out the cheek as he nostalgically reminisces about his time as a Victorian British Sandhurst officer. Silently, the gesture poses the pregnant question to the reader of a later time: Has your generation really improved the world of your time.As I read, memory casts back to my dear mother who was born into that same time, a wealthy Mennonite, German conscientious objector and royalist herself, who, nevertheless, merited the golden National Socialist (Nazi) party badge because she believed in Hitler as the “savior” of the overstressed Germany of her time. (see American By Choice - From WWII Ashes to Celebration of Principle - Amazon Kindle, May 14, 2014) Yet, she vehemently objected to the German press maligning W. Churchill on the grounds that Britain would be perfectly justified to equally malign A. Hitler. Their generation certainly imposed their will on their time, but no more or no less benevolently than ours.The book vividly conveys life lived as a privileged member of white society, so privileged was that life that, even as a soldier, he could pull the necessary strings to be, or not to be sent to a particular theater of war, naturally, always accompanied by his servants.I had hoped for a more honest description of the inhuman methods used by Great Britain to finally win the Boer War. Churchill admits to them, but skips over the detail.
M**A
Autobiografía
Interesante autobiografía de la juventud de Churchill
M**E
Ein must read
Im Schreibstil witzig, trocken, salopp, aber auch einfühlsamIn den Erlebnissen offen und ehrlich, auch in Teilen selbstkritisch habe ich das Werk verschlungenEs wird klar warum Sir Winston einer der größten Staatsmänner des letzten Jahrhunderts wurde und, warum er den Nobelpreis in Literatur gewann.
A**R
W.D. was a man of many talents and many friends in high places it seems.
Although I have read many books on Winston Churchill, I believe that this is the first one I have read written by him.I literally could not put it down. He has a great sense of humour (subtle at times) and the use of the King's English is refreshing. At this time of W.C.'s life it was the King's English and not the Queen's as Queen Victoria had passed on and Edward Vll succeeded her. Regardless, I found the usage of the "English" language a joy to read. This should be a MUST read for anyone wanting to broaden their horizons on British history in these times.
C**N
Great Book
I did not know about Winston Churchill life, so I read this book. It tells the first decades of his life, an amazing history of life.
R**A
Otro libro forma parte de mi biblioteca!!
Excelente libro, para mi es de interes la vida de Churchil, no me canso de leer cada pagina. W. Churchil uno de los mejores politicos que ah tenido el mundo, el bulldog ingles.
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