A historian, poet and autobiographer, A. L. Rowse (1903-1997)
moved through the worlds of academia, politics and publishing;
those he encountered upon the way came in for witty and vitriolic
diatribes in his journals. On their first publication in 2003 these
diaries were already widely anticipated - Rowse himself had
suggested in his lifetime that there would be much to scandalise
and entertain in them, and they didn't disappoint this prediction.
Winston Churchill, G. M. Trevelyan, T. S. Eliot and John Betjeman
are among the famous characters who came under his gaze, and whose
conversations and opinions of one another he recorded.
Compiled and edited by Richard Ollard, the diaries stretch from
the 1920s - when Rowse first left his native Cornwall to study at
Cambridge - to the 1960s, a fascinating and personal study of the
most turbulent decades in recent history.
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