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Curzon: The Last Phase, 1919-1925 - A Study in Post-War Diplomacy (Paperback, Main): Harold Nicolson Curzon: The Last Phase, 1919-1925 - A Study in Post-War Diplomacy (Paperback, Main)
Harold Nicolson
R835 R679 Discovery Miles 6 790 Save R156 (19%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In Harold Nicolson's own words 'This study of Lord Curzon represents the third volume of a trilogy on British diplomacy covering the years from 1870 to 1924. The first volume of that trilogy was a biography entitled Lord Carnock: A Study in the Old Diplomacy. The second volume was a critical survey of the Paris conference called Peacemaking, 1919.' All three volumes are reissued in Faber Finds. Curzon himself, not a modest man it must be admitted, rated highly the work of his final years. In his 'Literary Testament' dictated only a few hours before his death he said, 'As to my work as Foreign Secretary from 1918 to 1924 - a period of unparalleled difficulty in international affairs and of great personal worry and sometimes tribulation . . . - I court the fullest publicity as to my conduct in those anxious years and can imagine no better justification than the publication of any or all the telegrams, despatches, minutes and records of interviews for which I was responsible.' Some of the chapter headings alone remind us of what an eventful period it was: Armistice, The Eastern Question, Smyrna, Persia, Egypt, Reparation, Chanak and Lausanne. It is perhaps a pity that Harold Nicolson didn't write the official biography of Lord Curzon (he was a candidate) but what we have here is a work that is, in the words of David Gilmour, another biographer of Curzon, 'acute, jaunty, readable and sympathetic.'

Peacemaking, 1919 (Paperback, Main): Harold Nicolson Peacemaking, 1919 (Paperback, Main)
Harold Nicolson
R636 Discovery Miles 6 360 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

'Of all branches of human endeavour, diplomacy is the most protean.' That is how Harold Nicolson begins this book. It is an apt opening. The Paris Conference of 1919, attended by thirty-two nations, had the supremely challenging task of attempting to bring about a lasting peace after the global catastrophe of the Great War.

Harold Nicolson was a member of the British delegation. His book is in two parts. In the first he provides an account of the conference, in the second his diary covering his six month stint. There is a piquant counterpoise between the two. Of his diary he writes, 'I should wish it to be read as people read the reminiscences of a subaltern in the trenches. There is the same distrust of headquarters; the same irritation against the staff-officer who interrupts; the same belief that one's own sector is the centre of the battle-front; the same conviction that one is, with great nobility of soul, winning the war quite single-handed.' The diary ends with prophetic disillusionment, 'To bed, sick of life.'

As a first-hand account of one of the most important events shaping the modern world this book remains a classic.

Sweet Waters - An Instanbul Thriller (Paperback): Harold Nicolson Sweet Waters - An Instanbul Thriller (Paperback)
Harold Nicolson
R403 R299 Discovery Miles 2 990 Save R104 (26%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days
Some People (Paperback, Main): Harold Nicolson Some People (Paperback, Main)
Harold Nicolson
R411 Discovery Miles 4 110 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

On the face of it, bracketing Harold Nicolson and Vladimir Nabokov seems unexpected but the latter paid a remarkable tribute to Some People. When speaking to Harold Nicolson's son, Nigel, he confessed that all his life he had been fighting against the influence of Some People.' The style of that book is like a drug', he said. The critic and biographer, Stacy Schiff, has also admitted 'Some People has exerted more influence than I care to admit. I would reread it any day of the week.' Ever since first publication in 1927 it has been attracting this sort of praise. It is an unusual book comprising nine chapters each one being a sort of character sketch: Miss Plimsoll; J. D. Marstock; Lambert Orme; The Marquis de Chaumont; Jeanne de Henaut; Titty; Professor Malone; Arketall; Miriam Codd. The author himself writes, a little disingenuously, 'Many of the following sketches are purely imaginary. Such truths as they may contain are only half-truths.' In fact, it would be difficult to point to one, other than Miriam Codd, that was 'purely imaginary', some were composite portraits, others skilful amalgams of divers traits from a variety of different people, and others much more overtly drawn from one real-life figure, for example Lambert Orme clearly represents Ronald Firbank, and Arketall Lord Curzon's bibulous valet. There is nothing else quite like Some People and in its own playful way is beyond category. To be tedious for a moment, we have to call it fiction but are then immediately thrown by Virginia Woolf's deft summary, 'He lies in wait for his own absurdities as artfully as theirs. Indeed by the end of the book we realize that the figure which has been most completely and most subtly displayed is that of the author . . . It is thus, he would seem to say, in the mirrors of our friends that we chiefly live.' Fiction? Biography? Autobiography? - the category doesn't matter, the result is spellbinding however you choose to read it.

Programme for Victory (Works of Harold J. Laski) - A Collection of Essays prepared for the Fabian Society (Hardcover): Harold... Programme for Victory (Works of Harold J. Laski) - A Collection of Essays prepared for the Fabian Society (Hardcover)
Harold J. Laski, Harold Nicolson, Herbert Read, W.M. Macmillan, Ellen Wilkinson, …
R3,243 Discovery Miles 32 430 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Written two years after the commencement of the Second World War, the chapters in this book succinctly put forward the case for reorganizing the foundations of the social order, by rejecting capitalism and historical equilibrium, both in Europe and further afield in the British Empire, in favour of building a Socialist civilization.

Sir Arthur Nicolson, Bart, First Lord Carnock - A Study in the Old Diplomacy (Paperback, Main): Harold Nicolson Sir Arthur Nicolson, Bart, First Lord Carnock - A Study in the Old Diplomacy (Paperback, Main)
Harold Nicolson
R747 Discovery Miles 7 470 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Without exaggeration this can be said to be two books in one: it is both a biography of Harold Nicolson's father and a history of British diplomacy from the late nineteenth-century until the middle of the First World War.

Described as 'the quintessential diplomat' Sir Arthur's various postings took in Berlin, Peking, Athens, Teheran, Budapest, Constantinople, Madrid and St Petersburg. During his career his instincts mutated from pro-German and hating France and Russia, into a stage of wanting to make friends with those two countries and hating Germany. Harold Nicolson has an interesting and brave hypothesis regarding the First World War making a distinction between its origin and its causes. Regarding the former, in the words of his biographer James Lees-Milne, 'Harold maintained that from the years 1900 to 1914 we, compared to the Germans, had a clean sheet, whereas regarding the latter, say from the year 1500 to 1900 our sheet was very black indeed. Our Elizabethans behaved worse than the Kaiser's imperialists. And when the Kaiser's imperialists in the last two decades of the nineteenth-century developed predatory instincts in Africa, they met from us ''pained and patronising surprise.'' Harold with justice and a good deal of courage blamed Great Britain for the causes and Germany for the origin of the great conflict.'

Harold Nicolson always considered this to be his best book and its universally favourable reception supports that with the Times Literary Supplement observing that as a biography it was composed in the new intimate fashion introduced by Lytton Strachey. As has been said though, it was more than a biography, it was a history, and a most fascinating one, of the period leading up to the Great War.

Programme for Victory (Works of Harold J. Laski) - A Collection of Essays prepared for the Fabian Society (Paperback): Harold... Programme for Victory (Works of Harold J. Laski) - A Collection of Essays prepared for the Fabian Society (Paperback)
Harold J. Laski, Harold Nicolson, Herbert Read, W.M. Macmillan, Ellen Wilkinson, …
R1,195 Discovery Miles 11 950 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Written two years after the commencement of the Second World War, the chapters in this book succinctly put forward the case for reorganizing the foundations of the social order, by rejecting capitalism and historical equilibrium, both in Europe and further afield in the British Empire, in favour of building a Socialist civilization.

The Congress of Vienna - A Study in Allied Unity: 1812-1822 (Paperback, Main): Harold Nicolson The Congress of Vienna - A Study in Allied Unity: 1812-1822 (Paperback, Main)
Harold Nicolson
R601 Discovery Miles 6 010 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Harold Nicolson was well qualified to write this book. His father, Sir Arthur Nicolson, was a diplomat as he himself was in early adulthood being a member of the British delegation to the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 as well as serving in other capacities.

A later historian of the Congress, Adam Zamoyski, has described it in the following way: 'The reconstruction of Europe at the Congress of Vienna is probably the most seminal episode in modern history.' Harold Nicolson's classic account written piquantly just after the Second World War is memorable not just for its adroit grasp of the many complex issues but also for its numerous vivid character sketches of the principal peacemakers: Alexander I of Russia, Metternich, Talleyrand, Castlereagh and others are brought brilliantly to life.

'Mr Nicolson has written a vivid, entertaining and penetrating book about an episode in nineteenth-century history with which has gifts and his own education most particularly qualified him to deal. Moreover he often makes valuable generalisations. . . In a short review it is impossible to convey by quotation those qualities which will make it eagerly sought after: its vivid portraits and scenes from the past: its clear analysis of political situations as they arise; its shrewd comments on the characters of the men who dealt with them.' Desmond MacCarthy, "Sunday Times "

""

Faber Finds is reissuing all of Harold Nicolson's works of diplomatic history: "The Congress of Vienna: A Study in Allied Unity, 1812 - 1822"; "Lord Carnock: A Study in Old Diplomacy": "Peacemaking, 1919" and "Curzon: The Last Phase, 1919 - 1925."

Diaries and Letters Vol. 1 (1930-1939) (Paperback, Main): Harold Nicolson Diaries and Letters Vol. 1 (1930-1939) (Paperback, Main)
Harold Nicolson
R956 R756 Discovery Miles 7 560 Save R200 (21%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Harold Nicolson's Diaries and Letters, spanning the years 1930 to 1962, were first published in three volumes, and it is in this format Faber Finds is reissuing them. The one-volume abridgement available in paperback from Phoenix is practical, and in itself a superb piece of compression, but such a great work, one of the major diaries of the twentieth-century, deserves also to be available in its full original incarnation. 'Not only a brilliant picture of English society in the 1930's, but a touching self-portrait of a highly intelligent and civilized man driven by conscience and curiosity to enter politics' Sir Kenneth Clark 'Enthralling reading. . . . A sharp, concise and highly intelligent account of his times is provided, at once amusing and serviceable to the historian.' Malcolm Muggeridge, Observer 'One is hardly able to put it down for meals. . . It is very artfully edited for, besides the diary proper, there are many letters to Sir Harold's wife, Vita Sackville-West, and not a few from her to him. But this remains solidly and brillinatly Sir Harold's own book.' Cyril Connolly, Sunday Times

Diaries and Letters Vol. 2 (1939-1945) (Paperback, Main): Harold Nicolson Diaries and Letters Vol. 2 (1939-1945) (Paperback, Main)
Harold Nicolson
R920 R764 Discovery Miles 7 640 Save R156 (17%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Harold Nicolson's Diaries and Letters, spanning the years 1930 to 1962, were first published in three volumes, and it is in this format Faber Finds is reissuing them. The one-volume abridgement available in paperback from Phoenix is practical, and in itself a superb piece of compression, but such a great work, one of the major diaries of the twentieth-century, deserves also to be available in its full original incarnation. This is the war volume. From the first page to the last Britain was at war. From 1940 to 1941 Harold Nicolson was Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Information; subsequently he was a Governor of the B. B.C. Throughout he was in the perfect position to observe and describe, knowing the chief actors, Churchill, de Gaulle, Eden and many others. He experienced with acute anxiety and mounting excitement the fluctuating fortunes of the war, and came to share a mood of unreasoning faith and simple patriotism with the rest of the country. In July of 1940 he wrote, 'I have always loved England. But now I am in love with England. What a people! What a chance! . . . The chance that by out stubbornness we shall give victory to the world.' 'One stops to marvel at the achievement. Honesty, decency, modesty magnanimity are stamped on every page, as evident as the wit. These are not the normal virtues of successful diarists or would-be politicians, but Harold Nicolson possesses them all.' Michael Foot, Evening Standard 'He remains completely unaware that he is tapping out a masterpiece. Brilliant though he is as historian and man of letters, the diary will keep him best remembered. As lively as Creevey or the de Goncourts, Sir Harold is a peer of those classics. Mr Nigel Nicolson has again done a superb job of editing and annotating.' A. P. Ryan, The Times

Diaries and Letters Vol. 3 (1945-1962) (Paperback, Main): Harold Nicolson Diaries and Letters Vol. 3 (1945-1962) (Paperback, Main)
Harold Nicolson
R1,135 R756 Discovery Miles 7 560 Save R379 (33%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Harold Nicolson's Diaries and Letters, spanning the years 1930 to 1962, were first published in three volumes, and it is in this format Faber Finds is reissuing them. The one-volume abridgement available in paperback from Phoenix is practical, and in itself a superb piece of compression, but such a great work, one of the major diaries of the twentieth-century, deserves also to be available in its full original incarnation. In this third volume we see Harold Nicolson, though no longer a Member of Parliament, still deeply involved in public affairs. He joins the Labour Party: he attends the Nuremberg trials: he broadcasts from Paris on the three-months peace-conference of 1946, and he gives an illuminating account of the Suez crisis. But perhaps the most valuable political aspect of this volume, as with the others, is the portraits and private conversation of leading statesmen: Churchill in advancing age, Macmillan on his way up and as Prime Minister, Eden, Smuts, Bevin and many others. 'One of the best diaries in the language' Michael Foot 'Nowhere are his style and cultivation more truly reflected than in his diaries and letters, edited with skill and candour by his son Nigel . . . Full of witty and intimate pictures of the famous and immediate comments on the great events of the time, they were very much more than a record of classy hobnobbings, for few excelled Nicolson in the art of self-revelation and no lesser diarist could have made so moving and fascinating a thing of the relationship between himself and his wife, Vita Sackville-West, and his sons.' The Times

Tennyson's Two Brothers - The Leslie Stephen Lecture 1947 (Paperback): Harold Nicolson Tennyson's Two Brothers - The Leslie Stephen Lecture 1947 (Paperback)
Harold Nicolson
R319 Discovery Miles 3 190 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Originally published in 1947, this book contains the text of the 1947 Leslie Stephen Lecture, delivered by Vita Sackville-West's ex-husband Harold Nicolson on the fate of Tennyson's two brothers Frederick and Charles. This book will be of value to anyone with an interest in Tennyson's life and family.

The Meaning of Prestige - The Rede Lecture 1937 (Paperback): Harold Nicolson The Meaning of Prestige - The Rede Lecture 1937 (Paperback)
Harold Nicolson
R338 Discovery Miles 3 380 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Originally published in 1937, this volume contains the text of the Rede Lecture for that year, delivered by Vita Sackville-West's ex-husband Harold Nicolson. This book will be of value to anyone with an interest in the history of British diplomacy and British nationalism.

The Evolution of Diplomatic Method (Hardcover): Harold Nicolson The Evolution of Diplomatic Method (Hardcover)
Harold Nicolson
R829 Discovery Miles 8 290 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
English Men Or Letters Swinburne (Hardcover): Harold Nicolson English Men Or Letters Swinburne (Hardcover)
Harold Nicolson
R910 Discovery Miles 9 100 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
English Men Or Letters Swinburne (Paperback): Harold Nicolson English Men Or Letters Swinburne (Paperback)
Harold Nicolson
R596 Discovery Miles 5 960 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
The Evolution of Diplomatic Method (Paperback): Harold Nicolson The Evolution of Diplomatic Method (Paperback)
Harold Nicolson
R486 Discovery Miles 4 860 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Paul Verlaine (Hardcover): Harold Nicolson Paul Verlaine (Hardcover)
Harold Nicolson; Created by Sir Harold George Nicolson
R952 Discovery Miles 9 520 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Adolphe and The Red Notebook (Paperback): Benjamin Constant Adolphe and The Red Notebook (Paperback)
Benjamin Constant; Introduction by Harold Nicolson; Translated by Carl Wildman
R298 Discovery Miles 2 980 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Benjamin Constant (1767-1830) was a Swiss-born French nobleman, writer and politician. The only novel published by Constant during his lifetime, Adolphe is the story of a young indecisive man's disastrous love affair with an older woman of uncertain virtue, believed to be based on Constant's affair with Anna Lindsay, who describes the affair in her correspendence. The Red Notebook (translated by Norman Cameron) is fictionalized version of Constant's youth, education and travels to England.

The Congress of Vienna - A Study of Allied Unity: 1812-1822 (Paperback): Harold Nicolson The Congress of Vienna - A Study of Allied Unity: 1812-1822 (Paperback)
Harold Nicolson
R549 R483 Discovery Miles 4 830 Save R66 (12%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

A protean look at the science establishment-as well as the personalities behind the scenes-in such fields as behavioral psychology, linguistics, and economics.

Sainte-Beuve (Hardcover, New edition): Harold Nicolson Sainte-Beuve (Hardcover, New edition)
Harold Nicolson
R2,005 Discovery Miles 20 050 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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