13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Early work by one of the 20th century's preeminent writers, May 17, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: The Boer War (London to Ladysmith via Pretoria Ian Hamilton's March) (Hardcover)
Most avid readers of history know of Winston Churchill's mature works about the First and Second World Wars; and occasionally they know of his histories of the "English-speaking peoples" and of his biography of his illustrious ancestor the Duke of Marlborough.
But it is much rarer to encounter someone who knows of, much less who has read, this volume of his collected dispatches as a correspondent to the Boer War. That's a pity, for these very early works, written around the turn of the century when Churchill was in his late twenties, provide an illuminating window into the developing character and literary style of one of this century's preeminent journalists, historians, and statesmen. But the stories are of interest not only because of their author. These collected dispatches serve as a primer on one of this century's first and least-well-known wars, one whose brutality and political intrigue foreshadowed the nation-draining slaughters to follow in this bloody century.
The prose is a bit less polished and more stiffly Victorian than in his later works, but Mr. Churchill's sense of his destiny and his place in history, as well as his pugnacious self-confidence, shine through.
Well worth a read for those who'd like a glimpse at the formative years of this great man.
(by Michael Sebastian)
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