Five Days in London, May 1940 Audiobook By John Lukacs cover art

Five Days in London, May 1940

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Five Days in London, May 1940

By: John Lukacs
Narrated by: Geoffrey Howard
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About this listen

In the days between May 24th and 28th, 1940, the British War Cabinet held a historical debate over whether to negotiate with Hitler or to continue the war. In this magisterial work, John Lukacs demonstrates the decisive importance of those five days. Lukacs takes us hour by hour into the critical unfolding of events at 10 Downing Street, where Churchill, who had only been prime minister for a fortnight, painfully considered his war responsibilities. We see how the military disasters taking place on the Continent - particularly the plight of the nearly 400,000 British soldiers bottled up in Dunkirk - affected Churchill's fragile political situation, and how the citizenry, though only partly informed about the dangers that faced them, nevertheless began to support Churchill's determination to stand fast.©1999 John Lukacs (P)1999 Blackstone Audio Inc. Great Britain International Relations World War II Military Royalty Winston Churchill War King Imperialism England Self-Determination Interwar Period British History

Critic reviews

"With a delightful British accent and a professional quality voice, Howard...communicates the tension during those fateful days." (AudioFile)
"[This book] is lucid and splendidly readable, and furthermore, commands a host of dramatic characters....[It] has the power and sweep of Shakespeare's chronicle plays." (Boston Globe)
"Eminent historian Lukacs delivers the crown jewel to his long and distinguished career with this account....It is the work of a man who lives and breathes history, whose knowledge is limitless and tuned to a pitch that rings true." (Publishers Weekly)

What listeners say about Five Days in London, May 1940

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Excellent

I learned a great deal from this book. The author makes a compelling case for the importance of those few days in May for not just the outcome of WWII, but the course of the rest of the century as well.

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The Hinge of Fate

Was already taken as a title by Churchill himself, but that perfectly incapsulates what is written about here. I've read quite a bit about this period and I find Lukacs account to be compelling, even handed and judicious. It would be easy to lambaste Chamberlain and Halifax for the appeasement policies of the late 1930s though by this time the scales had fallen from Chamberlain's eyes. For Halifax it was more difficult. He belonged as William Manchester described it "England's decent, civilized establishment" and with the collapse of France he saw the prudent course to be a negotiated peace provided it would not be too Draconian. He despaired of Churchill's Romantic die in the last ditch vision, but it was that vision that was required and triumphed. This is the record of five days during which the fate of the West was poised on a razor's edge and it resisted the elemental forces that had brought it to this pass by obeying the single minded determination of a man who belonged to the past and the future but flourished in his unlikely present.

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7 people found this helpful

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Wonderful insight

Detail can blow you away. Double read

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Very good study of the crucial May 1940 days

This book by Chestnut College (Philadelphia) John Lukacs is a nice in-depth study of the crucial days in late May 1940 when an armistice with Hitler (or even Britain's defeat) was most possible. Good to read in conjunction with broader treatments of the war from Gerhard Weinberg and Sir Max Hastings.

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The finest hour

A great book. It shows how a man seized the moment and understood the consequences os an easy peace.

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was somewhat boring narration

I wanted to like this one..For awhile I did, but the war talk didn't engage me long enough. Perhaps I have read too much non fiction in recent weeks. I may have engaged if I read the tangible book. In audio it was more difficult.



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Less Than Meets the Eye

The publisher describes this work as a "magisterial" account of "decisive" and "historical" debates within Churchill's War Cabinet in London in May 1940. I think a better description would have been "The Peculiar Case of Edward Halifax." According to the text, Halifax, then the Foreign Secretary, suggested an approach to Mussolini to sound out the possibility of his mediating a European settlement with Hitler that would preserve British independence. Churchill rightly rejected the idea as a slippery slope that could sap morale and put England in position of negotiating with the Nazis from weakness--a terrible place to be when England still had the option of fighting it out. There was no real debate in the Cabinet. This was more a case of Churchill remaining courteous to Halifax by letting him speak his mind in Cabinet meetings, given Churchill's political imperative of keeping the Government united at the most perilous time in British history.

Still, the book does a good job of putting the terrible events of May 1940 in context: the uncertain fate of the British Army trapped at Dunkirk, the impending collapse of France, the well-founded fear of a Nazi invasion of England. With the benefit of hindsight, these are simply interesting facts. For those living through them who appreciated the dire situation, they knew their whole way of life and history were hanging by a thread.

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Mesmerizing !

This book takes us back to a time of intense international
Negotiation over the possibility on Great Britain’s part of avoiding
war with Hitler’s Germany.

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He didn't win the war.....

but he certainly didn't lose it. what an incredible insight into all the politics and intrigue of those five critical days when the third reich was knocking on the door and the collapse of Western civilization was eminent. when I find myself in times of peril I often think of how faced with enormous odds, the leaders and the people of that Island stood alone and stood steadfast.

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Darkest Hour

If you know the 2017 film “Darkest Hour” directed by Joe Wright and starring Gary Oldman this book covers in some detail roughy that same period of time. Well written and deeply researched (albeit) brief look at these perilous days. A nice “add on” to your more expansive histories of WW2. Allowing the reader to dive into these specific, critical days. I think it helped a great deal that the author is also very knowledgeable on Hitler and the Nazis.

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