🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
HomeStore

Beaverbrook

Product image 1

Beaverbrook

Edition: First US edition

Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Worn/faded, no tears
Pages: Good , price clipped
Markings: No markings

A masterful political biography, Beaverbrook chronicles the extraordinary life of William Maxwell Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook — the Canadian-born press baron, political kingmaker, and wartime minister who wielded enormous influence over British public life throughout the first half of the twentieth century. Written with characteristic wit and irreverence, A.J.P. Taylor presents an intimate and admiring portrait of his close friend, tracing Beaverbrook's meteoric rise from modest New Brunswick origins to the heights of Fleet Street and the corridors of Westminster power. Taylor details the man's complex relationships with titans such as Bonar Law, Lloyd George, and Churchill, illustrating how Beaverbrook's newspapers — including the Daily Express — shaped popular opinion and drove political agendas with relentless energy. The biography is as much a study of personality as it is of power, capturing a larger-than-life figure whose charm, cunning, and contradictions made him one of the most compelling and controversial men of his era. Authoritative yet deeply personal, this work stands as a testament to Taylor's belief that history is made by vivid, driven individuals rather than impersonal forces.

$5.33

Original: $15.24

-65%
Beaverbrook—

$15.24

$5.33

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Edition: First US edition

Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Worn/faded, no tears
Pages: Good , price clipped
Markings: No markings

A masterful political biography, Beaverbrook chronicles the extraordinary life of William Maxwell Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook — the Canadian-born press baron, political kingmaker, and wartime minister who wielded enormous influence over British public life throughout the first half of the twentieth century. Written with characteristic wit and irreverence, A.J.P. Taylor presents an intimate and admiring portrait of his close friend, tracing Beaverbrook's meteoric rise from modest New Brunswick origins to the heights of Fleet Street and the corridors of Westminster power. Taylor details the man's complex relationships with titans such as Bonar Law, Lloyd George, and Churchill, illustrating how Beaverbrook's newspapers — including the Daily Express — shaped popular opinion and drove political agendas with relentless energy. The biography is as much a study of personality as it is of power, capturing a larger-than-life figure whose charm, cunning, and contradictions made him one of the most compelling and controversial men of his era. Authoritative yet deeply personal, this work stands as a testament to Taylor's belief that history is made by vivid, driven individuals rather than impersonal forces.