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Churchill has more ink trailing him than most famous statesmen. He deserves it, for his victories and his defeats, his failings and his achievements. And Shelden's ink is perfectly formed.
 
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ben_r47 | 2 altre recensioni | Feb 22, 2024 |
A very good review of the early years of Churchill's life.
 
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David-Block | 2 altre recensioni | Jan 11, 2024 |
Very good and engaging biography covering the usual highlights but giving you a lot more context, presented well. Covers Churchill's early life through the world wars, but doesn't forget the twilight years, after getting pushed out of politics.
 
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A.Godhelm | Oct 20, 2023 |
Another great biography by Shelden who manages to balance delivering the basic facts, exploring controversies of note and doing it while delivering the material in an engaging way.
 
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A.Godhelm | Oct 20, 2023 |
I love Mark Twain and have since I started reading to myself long ago. I still love Mark Twain and I learned a few things about him that I'm glad to know, but mostly, in this biography which covers the last few years of his life, I learned things I would rather not have known or didn't need to know. Nothing bad about him, he comes through as the marvelous being he was--enlightened through and through, funny, kind, brilliant, observant and full of a special kind of exuberance, a talent for living, you could say. In summary, after Twain's wife, Livy, died, he bought a house he didn't really like in New York, lived there with his daughter Clara, acquired a secretary/house manager and got on with things. His boldest move was to begin wearing white. He worked hard on his Autobiography, knowing large parts of it were unprintable until after his death. His closest friend was Henry Rogers of Standard Oil, he enjoyed the company of young girls -- but let me stop your eyebrows from rising right now -- there isn't a whiff of anything sordid in it. He wasn't a lascivious person, was faithful and loved his wife, loved having daughters, wished he had granddaughters, and generally, liked the female spirit (thought they should have the vote, btw.) Twain is a reminder that our own culture has become almost hysterical with fear of close friendships occurring between people of different ages and genders. The big story here is that Twain decided to have a house built in Redding, Ct, but he was too busy to supervise it and he set Isabel Lyons, the woman who ran everything on the project. Somewhere in there he acquired a secretary, Ashcroft, and with one thing and another Lyons and Ashcroft left to their own devices too much and with no supervision and full access to funds began cheating and scheming to get legal control of all of Twain's property. It's a sordid story indeed and a lesson to never trust anyone but yourself, really. Lyons didn't start out with any plans to cheat and steal, but bit by bit, she fell down a rabbit hole of a little here and a little there and then Ashcroft came up with a big plan and she went with it. The house, Stormfields, was beautiful, but only stood for about 14 years, most of the time empty, before burning to the ground. The death of his youngest daughter, Jean, (who had severe epilepsy) was the turning point for Twain and after that, he began to fail. Probably the one thing I am most intrigued and happy to know is that Twain was born on the day Halley's comet passed over and died the same day as it passed by 75 years later. So appropriate! I probably should have Pearled this bio, it took an age to get through! And it felt, yes, a bit gossipy rather than literary. And kind of sad. ***½
 
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sibylline | 3 altre recensioni | Jul 5, 2020 |
This biography covers merely the last 3 years of Mark Twain's life and all I could think was, wow, hope I have that much to write about 3 years of MY life! Even while he wasn't writing Mark Twain certainly lived his life. I really enjoyed this book and I love reading how eccentric he could be. Highly enjoyable.
 
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gossamerchild88 | 3 altre recensioni | Mar 30, 2018 |
You're in for a really good, fun mystery! Bruno is a genuine psychic, whose visions are instrumental in solving the mysteries of The Violet Crow. The unknown girl's murder is just the beginning. The Violet Crow was a compelling page-turner, because I was so eager to find out what happened next and, of course, whodunit. I had my suspicions, but wasn't positive until the end.

And as for the why-dunit, I was totally blown away. I would have never guessed it in a million years! How about you?

I am looking forward to reading about Bruno's further exploits. There will be at least two more novels in the Bruno X Psychic Detective Mystery series: The Louse and The Philly Dog.

I recommend this one, y'all. If you like detective mysteries, I think you'll really like The Violet Crow.


Note: I received a complimentary copy of The Violet Crow in exchange for my honest review. All opinions shared are 100% my own.

Originally published on my blog Jane Reads here.
 
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Jane.Reads | Jun 29, 2017 |
3.5 I first read Moby Sick wen one of my sons was a senior in high school, it was assigned reading in his lit class. When he complained about having to read a book with so many pages, I just laughed. He asked me if I had read it and then challenged me to read it with him. If not for that challenge, not sure I would have finished. There are moments of brilliance but also moments of stupefying boredom. Or so I thought, but I also, thought Melville must be a fascia ting man.

He was, but like many of our authors and artists, he had fests of clay. Married to a judge's daughter, he fell in love with a married and very unusual woman, Sarah Morewood. She was his intellectual equal, loved literature, and she made him much more adventurous than he was normally so inclined. He wrote Moby Dick with the hopes of bringing a wide readership, ensuring his reputation in literary circles and making money that could help him get out of a staggering debt load. It failed, this book would not get the recognition he had hoped for until long after his death.

His life, his love, his children, affair, disenchantment with society and his literary downfall are all part of this book. His friendship, which he had hoped for more from, with Nathaniel Hawthorne and Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. Who also found Sarah fascinating is also here.

The book reads well, is interesting as to the insights the author presents about these noted literary icons, simply written. I did feel that there was some repetition, and some belaboring of insights presented, but on the whole I did enjoy much. The history of the times, how Melville was perceived, the press he garnered. I alternately became frustrated with or felt sorry for this very vulnerable man.½
 
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Beamis12 | 2 altre recensioni | Feb 25, 2017 |
Being unfamiliar with Herman Melville beyond the fact that he wrote Moby Dick, this book definitely had information new to me. It was intriguing to learn the personal side of such a giant in American literature. It's always fascinating to see such figures as human as you or I. However, some of the points the author reaches seem overly stressed. He expounds on the same points again and again, to the point of the proverbial 2x4. For a work this small, this duplicate expounding is even more evident.

The author presented his material in such a way to be very readable. He writes in an easy-flowing style, presenting the facts interspersed with quoted primary material. The narrative flows from point to point easily; the reader doesn't have to wade through chunks of dry material to absorb the information on this literary figure.

The information presented made me see Herman Melville in a whole new light. I hadn't given his personal life much thought besides the fact that he wrote Moby Dick and was an associate of Hawthorne. Yet the author is able to make this man a passionate, frenzied, melancholic, and flawed individual. He gives Melville depth by showing us his associations with friends, acquaintances, family, and lover. I finish this book feeling like I knew him on a very personal level; I'm not sure if this was the author’s intent, but it was achieved.

The author also makes some very interesting points on the writing process and inspiration for Moby Dick. Seeing how Melville's relationship with Mrs. Morewood impacted both his creative endeavors and personal life was the main focus of the book. The author does a fantastic job in shedding a new light onto Melville's inspirations and his primary work.

However, this area is also where the book fails a bit. There were times I felt the author was stressing Sarah's personality, love of nature, and hold over Melville too much. I got the point the author was conveying after the first few times the author makes it. Yet, these aspects are stressed so many times that it almost feels like the author felt his audience was dumb. And for a work this short, the overstressing of points and information is all the more a sin.

For an area that is fairly new to me, this book was engaging. It was informative and fairly entertaining to read. While there were times the author overstressed items and points, I still enjoyed this work as an intimate look into the life of an American literary icon and the impact the woman he loved had over him and his creativity. I would recommend this book to those looking for an informative and light read on a new topic.

Note: Book received for free from the publisher via a GoodReads giveaway in exchange for an honest review.
 
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Sarah_Gruwell | 2 altre recensioni | Dec 13, 2016 |
The title definitely describes this sketch set primarily around
1851 and introducing " Sarah Morewood—then regarded as a literary light in the Berkshires" (from publisher's note)
We'll trace the romantic and intellectual coupling of Herman Melvile and Sarah Morewood.
"Literary luminaries"--like Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes and Nathaniel Hawthorne can be found sharing their acquaintance.

The book is well researched and quite an interesting snippet drawn from the life of Herman Melville.
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Melville, Herman, 1819-1891.
Morewood, Sarah Huyler, 1823-1863.
Novelists, American -- 19th century --cultural heritage history
 
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pennsylady | 2 altre recensioni | Oct 3, 2016 |
I thought this book was well written and researched, but it did not meet my needs. I was hoping that the book would explore more of his writings and the mechanics and details surrounding the writing of his most famous works. The book barely even mentioned his books. The book focused on his overall life as a famous author, not how he became a famous author. One thumb up.
 
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branjohb | 3 altre recensioni | Aug 24, 2015 |
When many think of Winston Churchill, it is undoubtedly as the elder statesman with the jowly, bulldog face and steely determination to stand alone against the Nazis. In Shelden's Young Titan: The Making of Winston Churchill we see instead an overly confident, young, aristocratic talk of the town who romances a number of women, most of which turn down his proposals for marriage, before finding and marrying Clementine Hozier who will remain his lifelong companion.

One of the most interesting contributions of the books to Churchill studies is Shelden's look at the complicated relationship between the politically astute and active Prime Minister's daughter Violet Asquith and the young Churchill. It is a sad tale of Violet's unrequited love and leaves the reader to wonder what might have happened had Churchill decided on Violet instead of Clemmie. Given Violet's interest and actual participation in politics in contrast to Clementine, one is left wondering if she could have been the UK's Eleanor Roosevelt.

As Shelden correctly points out, many at the time and since have seen Churchill as a man undeserving of his fame having little to do with actual achievement and instead a reliance on his family's name and wealth. In reality the Churchills were not well off compared to other in the aristocracy and particularly after his defection to the Liberals, the Tory Party elite very firmly looked down upon the younger man. Churchill was always his own man with, as Asquith is quoted as saying, the "streak of lightning in the brain" that showed a true genius underneath. He worked incredibly hard at writing and speaking, practicing for hours and committing great swathes of writing to memory. Shelden points to his trials in politics and in love as the building blocks of the later man he would become.

The end of the book perhaps shows Churchill's greatest political failure in his decision as First Lord of the Admiralty; to attack the Dardanelles resulting in the utter disaster at Gallipoli in 1915 during the First World War. Shelden does give Churchill more leeway than he deserves in this regard, trying to point the finger at the mentally unstable "Jacky" Fisher as the responsible party as well and Prime Minister Asquith and cabinet member Lloyd George. While undoubtedly Churchill was the better war leader, this was his single worst decision as a military leader and even at the time he was well aware he was responsible having said to a visitor while in the midst of painting "There is more blood than paint on these hands".

While it is remarkable that Churchill recovered from this disaster, albeit some 20 years later, it was nonetheless still an epic military blunder. However, Shelden does show that Churchill essentially sent himself into exile in the trenches rather than remain in a do-nothing government post and it is hard not to admire a man for voluntarily going to face death himself after having consigned others to the same fate.

Overall this was an informative and enjoyable read and Shelden is currently working on a second volume which will hopefully be as informative as this one.
 
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twp77 | 2 altre recensioni | Jun 9, 2015 |
Covers Twain's last three and a half years after his wife's death.
 
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reannon | 3 altre recensioni | Aug 25, 2011 |
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