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Philip de Laszlo (1869-1937) was born into a humble Hungarian
family in Budapest and rose to become the preeminent portrait
artist working in Britain between 1907 and 1937. He painted nearly
3,000 portraits, including those of numerous kings and queens, four
American presidents, and countless members of the European
nobility. "Has any one painter ever before painted so many
interesting and historical personages?" asked his contemporaries.
There has been no biography of him since 1939, and this new account
of both his life and his work draws on previously untapped material
from the family archive of over 15,000 documents, to which the
author has had unrivaled access. It establishes the intrinsic
importance of his art and re-positions him in his rightful place
alongside his great contemporaries John Singer Sargent, Sir John
Lavery, and Giovanni Boldini.
The diaries of 'Tommy' Lascelles - as featured in the Netflix hit
THE CROWN 'Brilliantly entertaining and historically priceless'
Spectator 'Fascinating ... as much a contribution to royal legend
as to the history of the war' Daily Telegraph As Assistant Private
Secretary to four monarchs, 'Tommy' Lascelles had a ringside seat
from which to observe the workings of the royal household and
Downing Street during the first half of the 20th century. These
fascinating diaries begin with Edward VIII's abdication and end
with George VI's death and his daughter Elizabeth's Coronation. In
between we see George VI at work and play, a portrait more intimate
than any other previously published. This compelling account also
includes Princess Margaret's relationship with Peter Townsend, and
throws an intriguing new light on the way in which King George VI
and Winston Churchill worked together during the Second World War.
Lascelles was a fine writer - like most of the best diaries his are
a delight to read as well as being invaluable history.
For the very first time, The War That Never Was tells the
fascinating story of a secret war fought by British mercenaries in
the Yemen in the early 1960s. In a covert operation organised over
whisky and sodas in the clubs of Chelsea and Mayfair, a group of
former SAS officers - led by the irrepressible Colonel Jim Johnson
- arranged for a squadron of British mercenaries to travel to the
remote mountain regions of the Yemen, to arm, train and lead Yemeni
tribesmen in their fight against a 60,000-strong contingent of
Egyptian soldiers. It was one of the most uneven running battles
ever waged; the Egyptians fielded a huge, professionally-trained
army. The British fought back at the head of a ragtag force of
tribal warriors and, ultimately, won. Egypt's President Nasser
described the battle in the Yemen as 'my Vietnam'. It's a
fascinating, forgotten, and rip-roaringly entertaining pocket of
British military history, much in the spirit of Ben MvIntyre's
bestselling Agent Zigzag and Operation Mincemeat.
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