Cita
Stelzer's Dinner with Churchill sheds
a lot of fascinating new light on the way that Winston Churchill used the
dining table to advance his military and diplomatic strategies. Quoting
Stelzer, "No matter the circumstances - whether in the dining room at
Chartwell or on a picnic chair in the desert - Churchill's profound belief in
the importance of face-to-face meetings, and his unshakeable confidence in his
ability to get his own way in such intimate encounters, never wavered."
Anyone who used food and fine dining to get what they wanted out of people is
my kind of person, especially if there was wine, or in Churchill’s case,
champagne. Here, here!
Speaking
of booze, Stelzer devotes a chapter to the much-discussed issue of Churchill's
drinking. She absolutely has Churchill’s back, as would I, and examines the
evidence for his supposed alcohol abuse, and concludes that the charge is not
proved. Just because you enjoy the occasional seven cocktails, does not make
you an alcoholic. Thank you very much.
Dinner with Churchill is basically
the best historical biography I have ever laid my seeing double eyes on. Highly
recommended to the history buffs and beyond.
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