Detailed view for the Book: Closing the Ring

Title:

Closing the Ring
 

Authors:

Genres:

Non-Fiction
War
Autobiography/ Memoirs

Series:

Second World War
5

Ratings:

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Average Enjoyability:
9
1 votes
Average Rereadability:
4
1 votes
Average Complexity:
7
1 votes
Average Character Development:
1
1 votes


Editions:

# Date Publisher Binding Cover
1 1951-00-00 Mariner Books (reissue)  

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Blurb: 
Reader Remarks: It is fortunate for us as readers that Winston Churchill not only had the qualities of a writer, but that he also found the time to put them to such good effect. Many a retired politician has written his personal memoirs-few of them have ever done so quite as completely. In the war, Churchill used secretaries to help him cover the multitude of daily tasks he needed to get through and afterwards, when living at Chartwell, his home in Kent, he kept up the practise of using an amanuensis instead of writing himself. This allowed him to get far more work done, since he could literally do it with his eyes closed. Nevertheless, we may feel sure that the text is his own. Proud man that he surely was, there is little chance that he indulged anyone in much editing. When we see his virtually unedited copy sent from the field from India, the Sudan and South Africa at the end of the last century, we can feel sure that by the 1950s, he was a competent composer of text indeed. "Closing the Ring" is the story of the climax of the Second World War. Although he refused to admit it, Hitler probably knew deep down what everybody else could see very clearly after Stalingrad. The once mighty armies of the Third Reich were being forced to withdraw; some of the best divisions had by then been so savaged that little remained. Berlin was being mercilessly ground down to rubble by legions of British and American heavy bombers that ended up attacking their targets almost unopposed. It was the time when madness reigned in the Fuhrerbunker and when the Allies could see the fruit of their careful planning starting to ripen. Churchill was at once rewarded by the knowledge that he had been right in thinking America invincible, and at the same time he was sadly aware that an era was passing and the British Empire was fading away in front of his eyes. This is a long sustained narrative, written by a man in full command of his enormous personal resources. In addition, Churchill had access to a vast quantity of documentation concerning the period, because he had written much of that too! Frankly, this is an admirable work of history, told with a writer"s gift for spinning a yarn and I enjoyed every word of it. -- Owen Hughes (May 15, 2000) IBDoF Notes: Originally published in 1951. Original synopsis by author: "How Nazi Germany was isolated and assailed on all sides."