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Summary
Summary
From New York Times bestselling author of Destiny of the Republic and The River of Doubt , a thrilling narrative of Winston Churchill's extraordinary and little-known exploits during the Boer War
At age twenty-four, Winston Churchill was utterly convinced it was his destiny to become prime minister of England one day, despite the fact he had just lost his first election campaign for Parliament. He believed that to achieve his goal he must do something spectacular on the battlefield. Despite deliberately putting himself in extreme danger as a British Army officer in colonial wars in India and Sudan, and as a journalist covering a Cuban uprising against the Spanish, glory and fame had eluded him.
Churchill arrived in South Africa in 1899, valet and crates of vintage wine in tow, there to cover the brutal colonial war the British were fighting with Boer rebels. But just two weeks after his arrival, the soldiers he was accompanying on an armored train were ambushed, and Churchill was taken prisoner. Remarkably, he pulled off a daring escape--but then had to traverse hundreds of miles of enemy territory, alone, with nothing but a crumpled wad of cash, four slabs of chocolate, and his wits to guide him.
The story of his escape is incredible 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." Millard spins an epic story of bravery, savagery, and chance encounters with a cast of historical characters--including Rudyard Kipling, Lord Kitchener, and Mohandas Gandhi--with whom he would later share the world stage. But Hero of the Empire is more than an adventure story, for the lessons Churchill took from the Boer War would profoundly affect 20th century history.
Author Notes
Candice Millard is a former writer and editor for National Geographic magazine.
Millard's first book, The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey, was a New York Times bestseller and was named one of the best books of the year by a number of publications including the New York Times, Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, and Christian Science Monitor. The River of Doubt was also a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers selection and a Book Sense Pick, was a finalist for the Quill Awards, and won the William Rockhill Nelson Award.
Millard's second book, The Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness, Medicine & the Murder of a President, was released in September 2011.
Millard's book, Hero of the Empire: The Boer War, a Daring Escape, and the Making of Winston Churchill, made the New York Times Bestseller list in 2016.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Millard (Destiny of the Republic) takes a relatively minor episode in the life of Winston Churchill-his escape from prison during the Boer War-and makes hay with it, painting young Churchill as a brilliant soldier, talented raconteur, and politician in waiting. Churchill's escape from a jail cell in Pretoria and subsequent trek through enemy territory are presented as the first signs of the grit and determination he would later show as prime minister. Apart from some enjoyable biographical detail (Millard has a weakness for hair "shining like a dark jewel" and interiors of "rich yellow silk"), the book contains little of interest for readers who are not already die-hard Churchill buffs. Churchill's racism is consistently underplayed, the politics of the Boer War are ignored, and figures such as Leo Amery are reduced to drawing-room caricatures. By dwelling on Churchill's privileged upbringing, Millard effectively extinguishes any sympathy the reader might feel for a pompous young man who once wrote, in typically overblown fashion, that if his plans for political office fell through, "It will break my heart for I have nothing else but ambition to cling to." Not even some late attention to the wider world beyond Churchill can save the book from its hagiographic bent. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Biographer Millard gets at her subject by a somewhat out-of-left-field path that leaves the reader satisfied and feeling that her approach is right and perfect. In The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey (2006), she lets TR's post-presidency activities speak for the great president's natural rough-rider attitude toward life. In Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness, Medicine and the Murder of a President (2011), she defines James Garfield's extraordinary qualities by reconstructing his slow, gruesome death by an assassin's bullet. Now she writes about one of the most famous statesmen of the twentieth century, British prime minister Winston Churchill. Rather than facing the man in full bloom during WWII, she casts dramatic light on the incidents that brought to the attention of a rapt British public a young Churchill. In 1899, he was already aware of his future importance in the political world and certain that he would need to show glory on the battlefield during the colonial Boer War in South Africa. The perfect opportunity arose when he was taken prisoner and managed not only to escape but, after great hardship, also return to the fight. Millard's rendering of the exciting details of Churchill's heroic exploits result in a magnificently told story.--Hooper, Brad Copyright 2016 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
"WHAT AN AWFUL thing it will be if I don't come off," wrote a 24-year-old aristocrat, journalist and soldier named Winston Churchill to his mother at the beginning of 1899. "It will break my heart for I have nothing else but ambition to cling to." The Victorian era's last battle, the Second Boer War of 1899-1902, would be the making of Churchill as a hero and a celebrity, the biographer Candice Millard argues in this gripping tale of his greatest youthful adventure. "Hero of the Empire" draws out three strands of Churchill's personality: the imperialist, the adventurer and the mommy's boy. The defeat of the British Empire in the First Boer War had been a bitter pill that young imperialists like Churchill refused to swallow. "It is not yet too late to recover our vanished prestige in South Africa," he wrote. "Sooner or later, in a righteous cause or a picked quarrel... for the sake of our Empire, for the sake of our honor, for the sake of the race, we must fight the Boers." He went to southern Africa as a war correspondent, not a soldier - though he frequently blurred that line. His immediate reaction to the place was proprietorial: "The delicious climate stimulates the vigor of the European. ... All Nature smiles, and here at last is a land where white men may rule and prosper." At last. Churchill's imperialism sat alongside a single-minded, almost pathological courage. It is here that the comparison with one of Millard's previous subjects, Theodore Roosevelt, seems apt. "He can be splendidly audacious at times and, sometimes, at the wrong time," wrote one of his comrades. Churchill had fought before. In the Sudan, he had been surrounded by "horses spouting blood, struggling on three legs, men staggering on foot... fishhook spears stuck right through them, arms and faces cut to pieces, bowels protruding." He fought his way out: "I destroyed those who molested me and so passed out without any disturbance of body or mind." He could be pompous, writing to the general's aide-de-camp that he wanted a medal: "I am possessed of a keen idea to mount the ribbon on my breast while I face the Dervishes here. It may induce them to pause." What a peculiarly British imperial mind-set it must have taken to imagine that upon a field of mangled bodies and blood-spouting horses, a Sudanese warrior might have refrained from running Churchill through with a fishhook spear because he was wearing a special ribbon. In southern Africa, Churchill was traveling with British forces on an armored train when it was ambushed by the Boers. Claiming to be a journalist, he was indignant at being imprisoned, though the only reason he was able to say he was not fighting was that he had left his revolver on the train by mistake. He made an escape plan with two other men - but saw an opportunity to flee and did so, leaving his furious companions behind. The others had all the supplies (compass, map, opium tablets, meat lozenges), so Churchill faced a 500-mile journey alone through unknown territory with only a biscuit and four melting bars of chocolate. Anyone with a basic grasp of history will know that he made it. Yet the tale of how he did so has lost none of its thrill in the 116 years since it happened. Millard's suspenseful writing is ideal for this adventure-novel material. Not too much should be given away, for the twists and turns are such fun in the reading - but there is a moment down a mine shaft worthy of a Disney cartoon, when Churchill makes friends with some albino rats. Yet it is the story of Churchill the mommy's boy that forms perhaps the most intriguing strand of this narrative. Jennie Jerome was a beautiful Brooklyn heiress who unhappily married the increasingly deranged Lord Randolph Churchill. "She shone for me like the Evening Star," Winston Churchill wrote reverently of his mother. "I loved her dearly - but at a distance." He was a contemporary of Sigmund Freud, and it is hard not to piece the tantalizing details in Millard's book together to diagnose something of an Oedipus complex. Lord Randolph had by this point expired ; his widow was consorting with George Cornwallis-West, who was 20 years her junior - almost exactly the same age as Winston. "I hate the idea of your marrying," Churchill wrote to his mother. He hated it yet more when Cornwallis-West began "to adopt the manner of a disapproving stepfather." Many of Churchill's letters testifying to his own heroism were written to his mother. Cornwallis-West was also in southern Africa at the time - though he was unable to compete with Churchill's deeds, for he quickly succumbed to sunstroke. A few days after Churchill was taken prisoner, Lady Randolph hosted a war benefit for a hospital ship. "In my interest she left no wire unpulled," Churchill had once said, "no stone unturned, no cutlet uncooked." This can surely not have been literal: It is hard to imagine Lady Randolph ever cooking a cutlet. She sailed for Africa on the hospital ship in a custom boudoir, heaped with silk pillows, cut-glass decanters and potted plants, wearing an "unusually fashionable nurse's uniform that she had designed herself, with a lace blouse and a wide belt that accentuated her slim waist." Her shipboard demands included that "every scrap of religious literature" should be "brought up on deck and the whole pitched overboard for the moral instruction of the fishes." Lady Randolph did not have to save her son. Churchill freed himself, and signed up to return to the fighting as a lieutenant. MILLARD HAS A strong sense of character and storytelling, though she is less concerned with the details that often illuminate historical writing. There is occasionally the sense that a guidebook might provide similar insights, such as when Churchill's ship sails from Southampton: "Known as the Gateway to the Empire, Southampton had been used as a port since the Middle Ages. The Mayflower and its sister ship, the Speedwell, had set sail from there for the New World in 1620, and in just a few years the R.M.S. Titanic would do the same." Or there is the description of Blenheim Palace with its "marble floors, ... 67-foot-high-ceiling, ... arboretum, vast lake and elaborate, themed gardens - the Italian and the Rose." Of Churchill's first parliamentary seat, the northern industrial constituency of Oldham, she writes: "Although the town held none of the glitter of London or the mystery of Bangalore, it was gritty and real." This statement is impossible to dispute in any of its aspects, but perhaps could be said of almost any town in England, or anywhere. Yet these are quibbles, for over all this is a tremendously readable and enjoyable book. The material may feel well rehearsed to Churchill buffs, but breaking new research ground is not Millard's goal: She aims to retell the story in a thrilling, contemporary style for a new generation of readers, and in this she succeeds. Most historians will have cause to envy her narrative ability. Her prose gallops along; her short, action-packed chapters often screech to a halt on a Cliffhanger. A picture develops of Churchill as an extraordinary young man: deeply flawed yet indomitable. "Winston is like a strong wire that, stretched, always springs back," a colleague from The Manchester Guardian wrote. "He prospers under attack, enmity and disparagement.... The more he scents frustration the more he has to fight for; the greater the obstacles, the greater the triumph." Adolf Hitler was still a schoolboy at the time - yet already embedded in Churchill was the spirit that would face him down. Churchill faced a 500-mile journey with a biscuit and four chocolate bars. ALEX VON TUNZELMANN'S latest book is "Blood and Sand: Suez, Hungary, and Eisenhower's Campaign for Peace."
Library Journal Review
In the best-selling The River of Doubt, Millard chronicled Theodore Roosevelt's dangerous exploration of an uncharted river in the Amazon. Here the author documents the equally risky adventures of Winston Churchill (1874-1965) during the Second Boer War, in which Churchill and his fellow soldiers were captured upon arriving in South Africa. Churchill managed an escape, eventually returning to South Africa to free the men with whom he was imprisoned. The details of these exploits describe endless walking, narrow getaways from captors, and Churchill toting nothing but a squashed bit of foreign currency and some chocolate. Even more incredible is Churchill crossing paths with future historical greats such as Mahatma Gandhi and Rudyard Kipling. Millard shows how the hard lessons learned during this period influenced Churchill's character, decision-making, and personality. Riveting, bizarre, heroic, and sometimes humorous, this thrilling history will cause readers to shake their heads in disbelief throughout. VERDICT Enjoyable for all readers, especially fans of Churchill, military and world history, narrative nonfiction, and survival stories. [See Prepub Alert, 3/28/16.]-Benjamin Brudner, Curry Coll. Lib., Milton, MA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.