Just when you thought
everything possible had been written about Winston Leonard Spenser-Churchill, Britain’s
wartime leader, along comes another rewrite.
Not so fast, friends and
neighbors, liberals and conservatives.
Johnson approaches the Churchill mystique from a different direction,
interweaving Churchill the man, the politician, the writer, and world player
par excellence. Johnson has got the
background for it, himself a Member of Parliament, noted journalist, and Lord
Mayor of London.
When I took Modern European
History in high school, in what I now realize was the tyranny of the clock on
the wall, teachers simply did not have the luxury of painting broad sweeps of
history with more than a thin coat of watercolor. “You see,” they would say
(with the textbook backing up every sharply pronounced syllable) “Napoleon did
this and then he did that and that’s why Italy came to be united and the French
hate the English and the Hapsburg Empire crumbled.” I scribbled feverishly, knowing that for
reasons unknown, scraps of that pronouncement would appear on the final and I
would have to use a trusty No. 2 pencil to prosaically regurgitate.
Although the keepers of the
holy historical script did their best, to the seventeen year old mind, the
prolonged soliloquies did nothing more than describe the historical road in
terms of long, unblemished freeways.
What Johnson does with The Churchill Factor is to give you a
tour of the potholes, the resurfacing, the twists and turns and knotty reasons
why the historical road is a curving, winding journey, and seldom smooth. Historical twenty-twenty hindsight aims a bit
high and too straight, catching only the occasional glint of the sun. Johnson gets you down where the asphalt
smokes and the steamroller driver screams at the dump truck driver, and the
engineers step in to keep things going and the whole things costs ten times
what was promised.
First elected in 1900, Sir
Winston’s political career, with more highs and lows than a Disneyworld
rollercoaster, lasted until 1964, the year before he died. Two World Wars that set Europe in flames,
along with brushfire wars here and there, along with the decline and fall of
the British Empire were only a few of the roadblocks that marked Churchill’s
journey. Yes, he was First Lord of the
Admiralty a couple of times, and Prime Minister twice, but he also was a
conservative (Tory), turned liberal (for twenty years!), turned conservative. He was a hero, a goat, a hero once again, and
unthankfully voted out of office after what would come to be known as his
greatest triumph, only to be voted back in six years later.
Did you realize the British
Empire at its zenith was six times larger than the Roman Empire? Did you know Winston Churchill, as a
conservative, built the foundations of the modern British welfare state?
You can’t be in politics for
well over sixty years and not make enemies, who were once friends, and once
again returned to being so. How in the
world can your supporters suddenly despise you and your enemies admire you?
Was the wartime cabinet all
Tories? Not in the least. As the war clouds formed over Europe and
threatened very existence, did all of Churchill’s compatriots fall in line
behind him and his stand against the blackness that was Nazi Germany? Nope.
Then how in the world did he manage to become Prime Minister in 1940,
when his enemies were many and his friends few?
It’s a crooked, rock-strewn story and Boris Johnson tells it well.
The Churchill Factor is not a dusted off rendition of what you read in high school. It’s a polished page-turner that reads like a
thriller. And that’s exactly what
Winston Churchill’s life was, a thriller.
He stumbled badly. As modern
speech would have it, he was many times ‘thrown under the bus,’ but he
prevailed. His will and insight and
humor and indefatigable energy never failed him, even when those around him
dismissed any thought of his rising again.
Churchill humor. Well there were a lot of things he said and a
lot of things he didn’t say that he got credit for saying. Lady Asquith:
If I were your wife I would poison your tea. Winston: Madame, if I were your husband, I
would drink it.
Or how about Winston in the
men’s room? Someone knocks on the door
and announces: Mr. Churchill, The Lord Privy
Seal is here to see you. Winston: Tell him I’m sealed in the privy and can only
handle one shit at a time.
No, those are not direct
quotes. Read the book for goodness
sake! Don’t expect me to do all your
work for you, especially not after Boris Johnson has already done it and done
it well.
One proviso: Best to read this book on a Kindle or Pad
because Boris Johnson is an Englishman and the English vocabulary is upwards
three times larger than the standard American vocabulary. Much easier to push on the word and have a
definition pop up than to have to perpetually thumb through a dictionary.
But however you read The Churchill Factor, you’re going to
enjoy reading a great book about one of the great figures of the 20th
or any other century. What a story!
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