The Proud Tower Audiobook By Barbara W. Tuchman cover art

The Proud Tower

A Portrait of the World Before the War, 1890-1914

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The Proud Tower

By: Barbara W. Tuchman
Narrated by: Wanda McCaddon
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About this listen

"The diplomatic origins, so-called, of the War are only the fever chart of the patient; they do not tell us what caused the fever. To probe for underlying causes and deeper forces one must operate within the framework of a whole society and try to discover what moved the people in it." (Barbara W. Tuchman)

The fateful quarter-century leading up to World War I was a time when the world of privilege still existed in Olympian luxury and the world of protest was heaving in its pain, its power, and its hate. The age was the climax of a century of the most accelerated rate of change in history, a cataclysmic shaping of destiny.

In The Proud Tower, Barbara Tuchman concentrates on society rather than the state. With an artist's selectivity, Tuchman brings to vivid life the people, places, and events that shaped the years leading up to the Great War: the Edwardian aristocracy and the end of their reign; the Anarchists of Europe and America, who voiced the protest of the oppressed; Germany, as portrayed through the figure of the self-depicted hero, Richard Strauss; the sudden gorgeous blaze of Diaghilev's Russian Ballet and Stravinsky's music; the Dreyfus Affair; the two Peace Conferences at the Hague; and, finally, the youth, ideals, enthusiasm, and tragedy of Socialism, epitomized in the moment when the heroic Jean Jaures was shot to death on the night the War began and an epoch ended.

©1996 Barbara W. Tuchman (P)2005 Blackstone Audiobooks
Military World War Imperialism Self-Determination

Critic reviews

"It would be impossible to read The Proud Tower without pleasure and admiration." (The New York Times)

"Tuchman proved in The Guns of August that she could write better military history than most men. In this sequel, she tells her story with cool wit and warm understanding." (Time)

What listeners say about The Proud Tower

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

Masterful

As always with Barbara Tuchman a masterful, enlightening and instructive view on the selected period. In this case you get the feeling of living through the pre-war period. Some chapters are just an absolute please (e.g. first one on the English goverment & establishment, chapter on the Dreyfus affair in France). It is also commendable how taking ~8-9 different subjects and sticking to them the author manages to create a coherent tapestry of the period

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7 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

The gone mad before it went truly mad!

How do you tell the story of how a world went mad in 1914? You start a quarter of a century before and begin the slow walk forward year by year with a list of the self serving, self absorbed Politicians, Socialists, Anarchists, Monarchists and a sprinkling of liberal democrats. Their world is spinning from their grasp and a new world is emerging due to ideas, technology, political systems and they can’t seem to understand how to do it peacefully. At the fringe of society are the Anarchists who are hell bent on destroying any system for the sake of destroying. Assassination seems to be the main focal point that the Anarchist see as a way to cause change. Socialist see strikes and unification across borders as the way for workers to cause change in the Capitalist system. Politicians seem almost inept as assassination spreads across the world... and the world is marching toward the cataclysmic event that will turn Europe and the world upside down for the next 100 years. It is the end of the Monarchists, the emergence of totalitarian rule and with a glimmer of hope that the liberal democracies will prevail. What has happened is that they have been swept up into August 1914 with no way out, you might say they never saw it coming but instead they lived it and should have seen all the warning signs. The book is good but not great unlike the Guns of August or March to Folly. It may be the subject matter or time period, it could have been a great time during this period of history but the good people did nothing and allowed evil to prevail.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

An history of the past with relevance to today

Where does The Proud Tower rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?

An excellent demonstration of how individual decisions and historical trends can combine to produce radical, and unpredictable, social and political changes. The book is relevant to the current debate between those who on the one side believe in historical necessity and those who believe in the power of human will to produce "hope and change."

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Classic History

A penetrating study of the cross-currents of culture, thought and society in the decades leading up to the Great War. Is war programmed into the human species? Maybe.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Different View of History

The Author gives a great verity of information from the other side of history . The workers and politicians with back ground information and insights

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Outstanding

This shows why the author is one of the preeminent authorities on WWI. She has a vast knowledge of all aspects of age; politics, culture music art literature, everything. The narrator was awesome also.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

The narrator’s voice is so bad it blows my mind

I normally listen to audiobooks at 3x speed minimum. For other English narrators I sometimes go down to 2.5. I find this narrator unintelligible at almost any speed.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars

Tuchman sweep marred by narrator.

This book, like all of Tuchman's popular histories, is sweeping, interesting for general readers, and easy to understand without being pedantic or shallow. What I've always liked about Tuchman -- her knack for analyzing the root causes of events without losing the colour and passion of individual lives -- is evident here, though somewhat less technically-adept than her brillian medieval history 'A Distant Mirror'.

However, this particular Audible.com edition is marred by the precious upper-class accent of the narrator. Listening to Tuchman's descriptions of English aristocratic privelege in the tones of a girl's private school matron is slightly annoying, but as this lengthy book progresses through chapters on American politics, popular culture and social mores, and the coming Great War, it becomes positively off-putting. I particularly dislike the narrator's tendency to put on goofy foreign accents when reading quotations by the characters Tuchman discusses (GB Shaw in drole Irish brogue, Petr Kropotkin in absurd Russian growl, and so on).

This book is a great value at the price, but sample the reader's voice before you buy.

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11 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Lively history, beautifully read

This book is worth buying for chapter one alone. This paints a word picture of the lives of the aristocratic rulers of Britain in the last decades of the nineteenth century, at the peak of Victorian imperial power. It is sympathetic in tone, full of individual anecdote, and at times very funny.

Much of the book is just as good, with a close look at US politics at the time, the conditions and ideas that gave rise to the anarchists and international socialists, and the madness that engulfed French politics during the Dreyfus affair. The realistic cynicism in the description of the Hague peace conferences is brilliantly done and gives a strong sense of why the era eventually collapsed into the horror and violence of the Great War. The German chapter and the story of the tangled politics of the 'welfare' parliament are rather slower, but worth the listen.

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8 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Overwhelming detail

Would you listen to The Proud Tower again? Why?

No. Too much detail for an audiobook. The amount of information is staggering and interesting but it is better suited to reading than listening.

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5 people found this helpful