Troublesome Young Men: The Rebels Who Brought Churchill to Power and Helped Save England

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Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Apr 29, 2008 - Biography & Autobiography - 448 pages

A riveting history of the daring politicians who challenged the disastrous policies of the British government on the eve of World War II

On May 7, 1940, the House of Commons began perhaps the most crucial debate in British parliamentary history. On its outcome hung the future of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's government and also of Britain—indeed, perhaps, the world. Troublesome Young Men is Lynne Olson's fascinating account of how a small group of rebellious Tory MPs defied the Chamberlain government's defeatist policies that aimed to appease Europe's tyrants and eventually forced the prime minister's resignation.

Some historians dismiss the "phony war" that preceded this turning point—from September 1939, when Britain and France declared war on Germany, to May 1940, when Winston Churchill became prime minister—as a time of waiting and inaction, but Olson makes no such mistake, and describes in dramatic detail the public unrest that spread through Britain then, as people realized how poorly prepared the nation was to confront Hitler, how their basic civil liberties were being jeopardized, and also that there were intrepid politicians willing to risk political suicide to spearhead the opposition to Chamberlain—Harold Macmillan, Robert Boothby, Leo Amery, Ronald Cartland, and Lord Robert Cranborne among them. The political and personal dramas that played out in Parliament and in the nation as Britain faced the threat of fascism virtually on its own are extraordinary—and, in Olson's hands, downright inspiring.

 

Contents

Introduction
3
1 We May Be Going to Die
8
2 Playing the Game
21
3 Troublesome Young Men
36
4 Dictators Are Very Popular These Days
61
5 I Lack the Spunk
84
6 Quite Simply He Told Lies
107
7 Our Own Soul Is at Stake
126
14 The Misery of Doing Nothing
240
15 He Is Absolutely Loyal
261
16 Gambling with the Life of the Nation
275
17 In the Name of God Go
289
18 Victory at All Costs
306
19 A Question of Loyalty
322
20 A Sons Betrayal 339
339
21 Aftermath
347

8 Terrible Unmitigated Unparalleled Dishonor
143
9 Retribution
158
10 Waiting for a Stirring Lead
176
11 Here Is the Testing
192
12 Speak for England
202
13 Playing at War
219
Notes
365
Bibliography
403
Acknowledgments
413
Index
417
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About the author (2008)

Lynne Olson, former White House correspondent for The Sun (Baltimore), is the author of Freedom's Daughters, and co-author, with her husband, Stanley Cloud, of A Question of Honor and The Murrow Boys. She lives in Washington, D.C.

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