
Attribution
David StaffordPublication Details
Book1st edOverlook Press2000Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (LOWER LEVEL) D753 .S68 2000 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogDescription
Much is known about Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill’s close relationship: they had similar backgrounds, education, and tastes, and shared world enemies. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
- Roosevelt, Franklin D. — (Franklin Delano), — 1882-1945 — Friends and associates
- Churchill, Winston, — Sir, — 1874-1965 — Friends and associates
- World War, 1939-1945 — Diplomatic history
- World War, 1939-1945 — Secret service
- Presidents — United States — Biography
- Prime ministers — Great Britain — Biography
- United States — Relations — Great Britain
- Great Britain — Relations — United States
- United States — Foreign relations — 1933-1945
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Notes
- Originally published: London : Little, Brown, 1999
- "The author draws on wartime files only recently released as background for his new work - an intriguing look behind the congenial facade of Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, revealing how each jealously guarded knowledge from the other in pursuit of separate national interests." "Theirs was a unique relationship. It was based on linked national histories and partially shared nationality - Churchill was half-American - similarities in class and education, a special love for the navy, and a common belief in the superiority of Anglo-Saxon institutions. But above all, it was cemented by shared enemies: Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. On these foundations Roosevelt and Churchill constructed a fighting alliance unlike any other in history. Each in his own way had to deal with two other allies of stature - Joseph Stalin and Charles de Gaulle - whose agendas were certainly different again." "Roosevelt and Churchill also developed an extraordinary personal relationship, communicating almost daily by telegram, telephone, meetings, or contact through intermediaries. Their complicated camaraderie - which was always dynamic - ended abruptly with FDR’s death on April 12, 1945, just hours before American and British troops liberated Buchenwald and Belsen."–BOOK JACKET
ISBN
- 1585670685
LCCN
Open Library ID
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