
The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill, Volume II: Alone, 1932-1940: Winston Spencer Churchill, Volume II: Alone, 1932-1940
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Narrated by:
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Richard Brown
Manchester tracks with new insights this complex, fascinating history, without ever losing sight of Churchill the man - a man whose vision was global and whose courage was boundless.
©1988 William Manchester (P)1990 Blackstone Audio Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Critic reviews
"[Manchester] can claim the considerable achievement of having assembled enough powerful evidence to support Isaiah Berlin's judgment of Churchill as the largest human being of our time." (Alistair Cooke)
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What did you love best about The Last Lion?
The whole portrait of Winston, both his virtues and his foibles.And the historical WWI with anecdotes describing the horrors of war
Who was your favorite character and why?
Winston, of courseHow could the performance have been better?
There needs to be a better volume control. It is difficult to hear unless you are in a totally silent setting. Very disappointing as I listen in the car and on a treadmill. TURN IT UP!!!!Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
Impossible. 42 hrs. and 39 minutes made this a long readA Man Who Changed History
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Volume 2 - Outstanding. (This volume)
Volume 3 - Not Quite Outstanding.
It seems natural to start this trilogy at volume 1. If you aren’t committed to all three volumes then it may seem natural to start with volume 3...THE WAR.
All of this leaves volume 2 as the least natural place to start. I can’t argue with starting at the beginning for it will give the best look at the times of Victorian England and the height of the British Empire.
But I can say for sure that volume 3 is the wrong place to start. Due to failing health William Manchester was only able to finish the research on the final volume so he handed over all the writing to Paul Reid. This is very unfortunate for it is a drag on the magnificent quality of the the first two books.
William Manchester is one of the best writers around and so it’s natural that his first two volumes on Churchill would be gripping.
If you started with volume three and you’re unsure about whether to commit to volumes one and two, I assure you they are a big step up in quality.
Outstanding Tale of Churchill’s Life and Times
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the lion roars
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Excellent (except for French accent)
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Perseverance
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This second volume changed the narrator for the worst. Winston Churchill has a someone monotone, almost Irish accent which does not do justice to the great orator and at times can be comical. I really don’t know what they were thinking.
What’s with the crappy narration
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I had learned in high school that the West had sold out their allies in the East in the 1930s, but until reading this thoroughly researched and engagingly written history of the 1930s -- for the book provides so much context for Churchill's political and personal life that the book is possibly more a general history than a biography -- I had not understood how badly Baldwin and Chamberlain had sold out the democracies.
The author never shies away from admitting Churchill's less savory characteristics -- condescension to lower classes, egoism, racism -- the book really focuses on the Nazi threat, and in this context, Churchill emerges as the unqualified hero. Manchester holds his main character in the highest regard, and his enemies, from Baldwin to Hitler, in the vilest contempt. If you don't like historians' passing judgement on their subjects, I would urge you to keep an open mind and read this book anyway.
The reader at first put me off because of the nasal voice, but I quickly got used to it and now feel that many other voices that could have read this book would not have had sufficient gravity for the subject matter. The reader uses voices for reading quotes, especially Churchill. The voices could have been lame, but they never are and add significantly to the clarity of the prose, since the author mixes his words and quotes frequently. I even liked the few bars the reader sang, which wound up being wholly appropriate and adding to the prose.
Conclusion: Absolute must read for anyone interested in history, leadership, or politics.
Opened my eyes to the culpability of the Allies
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I love history and this book took me into history.
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Awesome
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Takes you back in history with winston
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