Globe Pequot / Lyons Press
Pages: 280
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4930-5052-9 • Hardback • November 2022 • $29.95 • (£22.99)
978-1-4930-5053-6 • eBook • November 2022 • $28.50 • (£21.99) (coming soon)
Christopher Catherwood is an historian and Winston Churchill Memorial Trust (now renamed Churchill Fellowship) Fellow since 2010. He has been one of the very few people ever to be elected an Archives By-Fellow, Churchill College Cambridge twice, with the award of his medal in 2014. He remains as an SCR Associate of the College. He has supervised modern British history for several colleges at Cambridge University. His Churchill Fellowship enabled him to study at the University of Virginia Alderman Library and the OSS Archives at the National Archives in Washington DC, and in 2001 he was a Rockefeller Fellow at the University of Virginia .He was the Crosby Kemper Memorial Lecturer, Westminster College, Fulton MO for 2008 and at the George C Marshall Center, Virginia Military Institute, 2009; and was the Peple Lecturer at the University of Richmond VA in 2011. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and has degrees from Oxford, Cambridge and East Anglia universities. He is the Academic Director for the Wake Forest University Cambridge program, for which he has taught for over two decades. He lives in Cambridge, England.
Praise for Churchill’s Folly: “This compelling volume raises eerie echoes of present-day Iraq. In the aftermath of WWI, France and Britain competed for the Mideastern leftovers of the Ottoman Empire… Catherwood… sees contemporary parallels in the unlearned lessons of ‘imperial overreach.’ Unwanted paternalistic protectorates have a way of imploding, Catherwood notes. Churchill conceded wryly that Britain was spending millions ‘for the privilege of living on an ungrateful volcano out of which we are in no circumstances to get anything worth having.’ In a readable historical essay stretched into a short book, Catherwood demonstrates yet again that one generation's pragmatism can be a later generation's tragedy.”-- Publishers Weekly “How did things get so messy in Mesopotamia? In part, because of Iraq's founding at the hands Winston Churchill, ‘undoubtedly brilliant but utterly lacking in any kind of judgment.’ An impressive study on the making of modern Iraq, with all its crises and catastrophes.”-- Kirkus Reviews “Catherwood is an excellent guide at cutting through the mythology that surrounds this subject.”—The Guardian |
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