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Marlborough: England's Fragile Genius | 
enlarge | Author: Richard Holmes Publisher: HarperPress Category: Book
List Price: £25.00 Buy New: £12.45 You Save: £12.55 (50%)
New (21) Used (5) from £8.75
Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 1032
Media: Hardcover Pages: 512 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.1 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.3 x 2
ISBN: 0007225717 EAN: 9780007225712 ASIN: 0007225717
Publication Date: May 6, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new book, in stock and dispatched from the UK. Freepost returns.
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| Customer Reviews:
A fine overview of the great man July 6, 2008 J. P. Mowatt (Cambridge UK) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
A fine overview of the life of Marlborough with some interesting details and fascinating insights. This may not be the definitive book on Marlborough (I think that honour still lays with Churchill's 3 volume history of his illustrious ancestor) but it would serve as a useful companion to the Churchill series giving some much needed balance to Churchill's occasionally one sided view. The book has a minor but niggling weakness in that the title, 'England's Fragile Genius' seems to have little connection with the contents. It mentions his headaches and various illnesses but he doesn't seem to be portrayed as particularly fragile. The major strength of this book is Holmes descriptive capabilities. I've previously read descriptions of the Battle of Sedgemoor and been quite baffled but Richard Holmes made it quite clear what the movements of troops meant to the outcome of the battle and gave some indication as to where mistakes were made and how each side capitalised on the mistakes or misfortune of the other. A fine book - a good overview and a sound objective analysis of the life of the first Duke of Marlborough.
Well worth a look May 23, 2008 Big Jim (London, UK) 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Yet another great biography of a great man that I have read in the past few weeks. There must be something in the water that encourages authors to turn these out! This a very readable and informative biography of someone who is possibly not as well known or appreciated as perhaps he should be as he was directly and indirectly responsible for much of the Europe we see today, so his legacy truly lives on. The fact that he is probably best known as an ancestor of Winston Churchill and Princess Diana does him a great disservice as his life story is so remarkable that in the hands of such an experienced and skillful biographer as Mr Holmes it fairly leaps from the page, and makes this book, (cliche alert!) a real page turner...sorry but it's true. Although the author's expertise is towards military history, he does touch on the importance of his personal relationships and political machinations that went on around him, but not in as great depth. Hibbert's book "The Marlboroughs" which has more detail on his relationship with his wife Sarah and her equally remarkable story is probably as good a book as any for that. By all accounts Marlborough should be held in as high esteem as Nelson and Wellington in the English/British psyche, and this book goes a good way to supporting that thesis.
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