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Celia Sandys

Author of Churchill: Wanted Dead or Alive

7 Works 390 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Celia Sandys is the granddaughter of Sir Winston Churchill and the author of five books on Churchill, including We Shall Not Fail: The Inspiring Leadership of Winston Churchill and From Winston with Love and Kisses: The Young Churchill. She lives in London, England.

Includes the name: Sandys Celia

Works by Celia Sandys

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Duncan-Sandys, Celia Mary
Birthdate
1943-05-18
Gender
female
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
London, England, UK
Occupations
biographer
Relationships
Churchill, Winston S. (grandfather)
Short biography
Celia Mary Sandys, a granddaughter of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, has been married three times and has four children. She has written several books and appeared in television documentaries about her famous grandfather, including Churchill: The Nation's Farewell (2015) and Chasing Churchill.

Members

Reviews

When people talk about Sir Winston Churchill they usually talk about his leadership during WWII. And rightly so, but the beginnings of his greatness started long before he became prime minister of England.

Here in this volume his adventures in the Boer war are discussed at length. He spent a great deal of the war as a correspondent. As a civilian he showed great bravery under fire when a scouting train was ambushed and was responsible for saving the lives of several men and rescuing the train engine when he took charge of the situation. He was able to return to active duty and retain his role as a correspondent, even though that was against the rules. An exception was made, he only had to agree to being in an unpaid status while serving.

He was captured and imprisoned for some time and escaped. Having adventures was not enough though. He also wrote about them, published several books, managed to support himself, and kept his eye on the goal of running for political office one day. He had a sense of destiny, patriotism, and a strong will to win when things were difficult. His standing as aristocracy may have opened some doors for him but he made his own way. He was more than likely an extrovert.

This book includes the results of interviews of the children of people that Churchill met in South Africa and the stories that they told. They are well woven into the overall pace of the narrative and add to the story rather than being mere asides.

Churchill had a lifetime of experience by his 26th birthday.
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Flagged
Chris_El | 1 other review | Mar 19, 2015 |
I enjoyed reading this; it serves two purposes; first to illuminate Churchill's escapades in the Boer War and secondly to put the war into a better historical context - for me at least.
 
Flagged
xtofersdad | 1 other review | Aug 16, 2008 |

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Statistics

Works
7
Members
390
Popularity
#62,076
Rating
3.8
Reviews
2
ISBNs
37
Languages
1

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