Bookstealer Books

Google
Other Categories
Biography
  Family and Childhood
  Memoirs
  Sports and Outdoors
  Women
  Special Needs
  Audio Books
  Historical
  British Historical
  Canadian Historical
  United States Historical
  Civil War
  Holocaust
  Large Print
  Military Leaders
  Political Leaders
  Presidents
  Religious Leaders
  Rich and Famous
  Royalty
  Prime Ministers
  Ethnic
  Black-African American
  Australian
  Chinese
  Hispanic
  Irish
  Japanese
  Jewish
  Native American Indian
  Native Canadian Indian
  Scandinavian
  Careers
  Astronauts
  Business
  Criminals
  Doctors and Nurses
  Journalists
  Lawyers and Judges
  Military and Spies
  Philosophers
  Scientists
  Social Scientists and Psychologists
  Sociologists
  Teachers
  Sports
  Baseball
  Basketball
  Explorers
  Football
  Golf
  Hockey
  Soccer

Search Now:

Biography - British Historical books

Posted in Biography (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Stanley Weintraub. By Plume. The regular list price is $16.95. Sells new for $7.47. There are some available for $0.50.
Read more...

Purchase Information

2 comments about Victoria an intimate biography.

  1. Very, very detailed account of the life of Queen Victoria. I appreciate the author's effort, but this book is a failure!

    This book TRIED to be a political AND intimate biography but it just didn't work. The reader is overwhelmed with minor details about the politics of Victoria's reign without getting the big picture. All the details are wonderful, but the author writes in such a confuzing manner that it's hard to follow everything. In the end, we are left with a vague idea about the events of her reign.

    There was an alarmingly small amount of information on Victoria's personal relationships. I don't know what else to say because I honestly can't recall learning anything new! Stanley ignored Victoria's family and it makes for horrible reading.

    Honestly, this book is a very boring read. Do not waste your time even trying to consume and understand this "intimate" biography.



  2. The author does an excellent job of detailing Queen Elizabeth's life, from girlhood to her death. Throughout the book are the Queen's own letters, furthing our insight into this dynamic female ruler. After finishing this book, I felt as though I knew Her Royal Highness personally!


Read more...


Posted in Biography (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Christopher Lee. By Midnight Marquee PR. Sells new for $20.00. There are some available for $12.39.
Read more...

Purchase Information

5 comments about Christopher Lee, Tall, Dark and Gruesome.

  1. Written in a style that is easy to read and genuinely fun to follow, this autobiographical account of Christopher Lee's "life and times" is delightful. Mr. Lee's own account of his childhood, early adulthood, film career, and genuine love for his wife and daughter often brought me to tears, made me laugh, and inspired me. This was, clearly, someone who made the most of what was given to him in life.

    After reading his autobiography, I can honestly say that this is a man worth knowing. He has had a phenomenal life, accomplished more than most, and appears to be a genuine "good guy" trying to make it through life, just like the rest of us! Hats off to you, Mr. Lee! You are superb.



  2. Christopher Lee tells about his career in motion pictures, but of course the interesting parts are where he talks about playing Dracula and the problems he had with Hammer Studios. Having seen all of the Hammer Dracula movies it is easy for me to understand why Lee felt frustrated in the role. The character was reduced to being so animalistic; in some films he never even speaks. This autobiography makes it clear Lee could have done much more with the role (and actually got the chance to do so, but in a film made after this book was published). Certainly an interesting book for Lee's fans, but hopefully they will end up with more of an appreciation for the man's entire career in acting.


  3. Christopher Lee reveals himself to be tenacious, diligent, precise, hardworking and tireless. He cares about many things and many people. His beliefs are evidenced in his loving actions: serving in the elite armed forces for his country; putting his family first in thought and in deed; and by founding the Charlemagne film company, dedicated to eradicating evil. Mr. Lee appears completely worthy of having Knighthood bestowed upon him. It is most unclear why that hasn't yet happened, and quite disheartening when folks with less transparent qualifications have achieved the honor. At times we fail to fully realize to whom we should bow, to return the service in kind. On behalf of the human race, thank you, Mr. Lee, for advocating for our well-being.


  4. Time to get up close and personal with an actor we've all admired for years. This is a facsinating book and with each chapter, we come to realize just how multi-dimensional this versatile actor really is. As he tells the story of his childhood, the World War II years, his film career and his personal life as a husband and Father, you really learn to appreciate this amazing gentleman on more levels than simply his acting. You see Mr. Lee as very human, humerous, talented and outspoken. If you read just one autobiography this year, make it this one!


  5. In an age where many of today's actors lead lives of wreckless irresponsibility, excessive substance abuse and have multiple marriages, here is a man who has been entertaining us for 50 years AND also has managed to lead a most examplary life. Here is someone who can be a role model for your children.

    Enter Mr Christopher Lee: we all know him as a superb actor, but did you know he is a wonderful singer as well? We may know he is of British and Italian ancestry, but did you know how he is related to Charlemagne or to a brave Cardinal who stood up to Napoleon himself? Here is a man who courageously served his country in WWII, is a extraordinary linguist, and is married to the same lady for 39 years. And now at an age where many people have since long retired, he is STILL charming and entertaining us with yet more magical movie moments. You will not be able to put this book down. I read it over a weekend. You will be moved to laughter, tears, and perhaps inspired to do more with your life than you've done after you witness this man's story. And you'll read it again and again.

    It's just nice to know that heros still exist. And in the show business field no less! Bravo, Mr Lee!



Read more...


Posted in Biography (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Denise Levertov and Christopher MacGowan and William Carlos Williams. By New Directions Publishing Corporation. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $14.00. There are some available for $11.96.
Read more...

Purchase Information

No comments about The Letters of Denise Levertov and William Carlos Williams.




Posted in Biography (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Alison Plowden. By The History Press. The regular list price is $15.95. Sells new for $17.27. There are some available for $2.88.
Read more...

Purchase Information

1 comments about Danger to Elizabeth.

  1. Most books on Elizabeth spend little time putting her reign into historical context, which is why Alison Plowden's books on that time period are a must-read for those interested in Elizabeth. In Danger to Elizabeth, Plowden describes the plans and plots of the Catholics who were determined to overthrow Elizabeth and rescue England from heresy. Plowden's research is thorough and her writing style is interesting and engaging.


Read more...


Posted in Biography (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by John Haylock. By Arcadia Books. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $15.73. There are some available for $12.50.
Read more...

Purchase Information

1 comments about Eastern Exchange.

  1. The subtitle of this autobiography is "Memoirs of People and Places". The author states that he has always been more interested in people than in places. This interest does not preclude him from giving graphic descriptions of the many countries he has lived in: Iraq, Japan, Morocco, Egypt, Cyprus, Thailand; and also of those he has visited: China, Russia, Sarawak, Sri Lanka, Laos, India, Libya. Being a writer of fiction ( A Touch of the Orient, Uneasy Relations, Doubtful Partners ) he has the novelist's observing eye, and his observations are often entertaining. About the manager of a hotel in Baghdad he has written: "Mr. Yousef was a little man with a boiled-lobster, pock-marked face, and not much hair grew on his small head. His blue eyes were close to his podgy, pitted nose, and his perpetual, twisted smile revealed large yellow teeth. More often than not he was tipsy, even before lunch . . . He would wobble about the hotel lobby like a marionette with a few broken strings, smiling inanely. He was not an unpleasant man, in fact he was a kind one . . ." Going up the Rajang River in Sarawak, he says: " The river was magnificent, powerful, mysterious; mysterious because of the banks shrouded by dark-green jungle, it brown opaqueness, its swift, strong, silent movement, its emptiness. Only rarely did we see another longboat and then it was little more than a speck hugging the other bank.: The title of the book comes from a hotel in Port Said: "Its name caught my fancy the first time I stayed there in the 1940's. My life has been a sort of exchange with the East; an unfair one, perhaps, because I feel I have given less to the East than the East has given to me." Haylock taught English in Baghdad and in Tokyo. He stated that the happiest time of his life was from 1975 - 1984 when he was back in Tokyo "with a well-paid university post, reasonable accommodation, and a wonderful Japanese friend". The author is candid about his tastes. In between teaching there were gaps during which he stayed in various lands (Morocco, Cyprus, Portugal) and visited China and the USSR, as it still was in 1971. In China in 1965, just before the Cultural Revolution, "at the height of the cult, one might say of the deification of Mao Tse-Tung", he was in the stern hands of hard-line guides, who constantly poured tedious propaganda into his unwilling ears. He crossed Siberia by train, having to share a compartment with a ninety-three-year-old Australian woman, who died on the way. Her death was wrongly diagnosed as being due to Cholera and Haylock and the other passengers in the carriage were at Sverdlosk taken off the train and confined in an isolation hospital for several days. The author states "for much of my life I have lived in blissful ignorance in the countries I have inhabited. As an expatriate I have escaped the responsibilities, but not the taxes, which those who properly belong have to shoulder. I have enjoyed being an escapist". Perhaps the author would have written a deeper and less light-hearted book if he had properly belonged. This frank autobiography describes his life, not of adventure, but a varied one full of amusing encounters and unusual situations.


Read more...


Posted in Biography (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Flora Fraser. By University of California Press. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $2.99. There are some available for $0.77.
Read more...

Purchase Information

5 comments about The Unruly Queen: The Life of Queen Caroline.

  1. Both Fraser Mother & Fraser daughter can research a subject to death. However, neither writes gracefully or entertainingly. This book reads like a compilation of notes. Yawn. I'd rather read a loosey goosey Mitford biography, as if I wanted sleep, I'd read dissertations.


  2. This is a fascinating, almost incredible, true story, but (as reviewers who've preceded me here have pointed out) Flora Fraser hasn't managed to do it justice. Queen Caroline's actions are so baffling, so inconsistent, and so seemingly self-destructive that a writer really must have a "take" on her for a biography to be enlightening or moving. Fraser seems almost afraid to take a stand, or else so mired in her research that she's lost the need for a big picture. The result is that when Caroline veers in completely new directions-- suddenly taking lovers after years of faithfulness to a husband who despised her, or leaving England at the drop of a hat after years of determination to fight her battles there-- the reader gets the (highly detailed) facts without any insights that could help us understand a seemingly random shift. We don't even learn why Caroline, with few marital prospects into her mid-20s, was chosen to marry the future George IV in the first place. It's not even clear whether Fraser likes her subject, approves of her actions, or felt much enthusiasm for the project except as a collector of commemorative objects she calls "Carolingiana." I guess writing biographies is just the family business...

    Specific oddities include no real sense of George IV's personality or motivation, the tendency of key people to drop out of the narrative altogether when they're not present in Caroline's life (even those important to Caroline, like her daughter Charlotte), and detailed descriptions of paintings (by one of Caroline's supposed lovers, Thomas Lawrence) that Fraser hasn't actually included in the illustrations. So much is made of the transformation of Caroline's appearance over the years that we really do need to see more from her later life than caricatures and cartoons.

    It would seem inevitable that someone will make a great drama out of this story-- as a biography, or even as a play or film. It's a shame that Fraser didn't see that she could convey some of this drama, and real insight, without compromising her extensive research.


  3. Flora Fraser writes beautifully, and her research is impeccable. This is one of the best "life and times" set in Georgian England available today. The popularity of Queen Caroline with the populace, always looking for symbols of opposition to the monarchy, makes clearer the similar fascination in our time with as inexplicable a figure as Diana, Princess of Wales. The books is a great read that has something to say, rather like the wonderful Mediterranean histories written by the late Sir Steven Runicman (e.g., History of the Crusades). The Unruly Queen, along with David Gilmour's Curzon, are must reading for those interested in British history.


  4. Whatever were they THINKING!?! I mean, the author, and worse, the editors. This is an appallingly bad book. I staggered through the whole University of California paperback version, convinced that eventually it would improve. Sadly, I was too optimistic.

    Caroline of Brunswick was clearly quite an unpleasant person all 'round. Ill-educated, dishonest, gullible, ill-bred, plain at best, lacking in style and sense, desperate for any sort of attention, she would be difficult to like in the hands of the most talented biographer. It's a shame that she was left to Flora Fraser. This particular Ms. Fraser is living proof that a talent for biography isn't hereditary. She is pendantic, tedious, and apparently without enthusiasm for her subject, whom she abandons regularly in pursuit of political minutiae.

    I was startled by the ineptitude of the editing. In a number of instances the vocabulary used was clearly anachronistic slang, but the quotes were not footnoted, leaving the reader bewildered as to the meaning of the quote. In these instances, the Oxford English Dictionary was no help, surely a responsible standard for an editor of a British/American release? Some quotes are simply inaccurate.

    I suspect the editors may have been overawed by Flora Fraser's lineage, and hopeful of a comparison between Diana Spencer and Caroline of Brunswick. If Caroline was as Flora Fraser describes, there is scant ground for such hopes.

    I majored in British history, am quite accustomed to dry texts, and have read each and every one of Lady Antonia Fraser's splendid works with pleasure. In this case, the daughter should NOT have attempted to go into the family trade, she has no talent for it.

    I very much regret the time I wasted plodding through this exceedingly dull book about a sad, dreary woman who would have been best left to rest in peace.

    And no, to the best of my knowledge, I'm no relation to this branch of Frasers.



  5. A biography about one of England's most enigmatic and on this side of the pond at least lesser known Queens. Charlotte born into the rather stogy provincal atmosphere of the Hanoverian Court was married off while still a teenager to her first cousin the future King George IV. A dandy and bon vivant who had already contracted a marriage years ago to the attractive and apparently virtuous widow Mrs. FitzHerbert. Alas Mrs. FitzHerbert was not only a commoner but a staunch catholic and George was a spend thrift. When His father refused to continue filling his coffers unless he found himself a proper (i.e. Royal) bride he abandoned Mrs. FitzHerbert and wed poor Charlotte.

    Almost at once however he was repulsed by his cousin (whom he had never before met). After siring one child (a daughter Charlotte) he promptly returned to the far more worldly and appealing Mrs. FitzHerbert. This led poor Charlotte to rebel.

    Her rebellion was to cost her dearly. Leading in the end to a notorioius and flawed trial headed by parliment to decide if she was in fact guilty of adultry.

    Charlotte led a tragic but interesting life. As with Marie-Antoinette it can be said that Charlotte's own bad judgement and ignorance were as much (if not more) to blame for her misfortunes as the ill will of her enemies.

    Overall it was an engaing account of a fascinating woman and period in time. It gave glimpses into the lives of the rest of the British Royal Family. From George's rather embittered maiden sisters to his mad father King George III and his outwardly sweet but meddling mother Queen Charlotte.



Read more...


Posted in Biography (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Michael Holroyd. By W. W. Norton. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $13.10. There are some available for $15.61.
Read more...

Purchase Information

No comments about Bernard Shaw: The One-Volume Definitive Edition.




Posted in Biography (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by David Wykes. By Palgrave Macmillan. The regular list price is $79.95. Sells new for $75.00. There are some available for $2.66.
Read more...

Purchase Information

No comments about Evelyn Waugh: A Literary Life (Literary Lives).




Posted in Biography (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Peter Ratcliffe. By Lewis International Inc. There are some available for $4.90.
Read more...

Purchase Information

2 comments about Eye of the Storm.

  1. Similar in some respects to Mike Curtis' 'CQB', this is an account of the author's SAS career, having joined via the parachute regiment in the 1970s. It divides up into three distinct battlefields - Oman, the Falklands the the Gulf, with the meat of the book taking place in the latter area. The first two sections are fairly run-of-the-mill, although it's interesting to compare the Falklands section with Max Hastings' 'Battle for the Falklands' and the aforementioned 'CQB', as one particular moment - in which an SAS soldier shoots down an Argentine aircraft with a Stinger - pops up in all three books, each from a slightly different perspective.
    It's the coverage of the Gulf war that's particularly interesting, though, as Ratcliffe took part in an SAS operation that's been gone over comprehensively in other books, books which he has read. Consequently, like some real-life 'Rashomon', he points out the exaggerations and untruths in 'Bravo Two Zero', 'Sabre Squadron' and others, all books which you can find elsewhere on Amazon.com. Whilst he seems slightly petulant at times (his account of leading a patrol gives the impression that he was blissfully unaware that he might come across as being, well, smug), it makes for fascinating reading...


  2. I've read a few Special Forces books but this one is by far and away the best one yet. There's so much in it that one doesn't usually hear about and also I enjoyed 'Billy's' sense of humour which crops up now and again. Tremendous read.


Read more...


Posted in Biography (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by David Starkey. By Franklin Watts. There are some available for $18.93.
Read more...

Purchase Information

No comments about The Reign of Henry VIII: Personalities and Politics.




Page 69 of 325
5  37  44  45  46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60  61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73  74  75  76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90  91  92  93  101  133  197  325  

Copyright © 2008
*Amazon.com prices and availability subject to change.
Last updated: Thu Jul 24 05:25:28 EDT 2008