
I like the guy's writing because he endlessly puts opinions out there - whether or not you agree, it's interesting and makes you think. It was fairly long, 500 pages, and good material for reading at the gym.
The story goes through World War I; celebrations of empire at a time when its demise was pretty much inevitable; disturbances in Ireland; World War II; lots about Churchill (who is more amazing every time you read about him); loss of empire (India in particular); etc. He walks through the thesis that England quite possibly could have made peace with Hitler after the fall of France; Hitler did seem to have a reluctance to attack England and an affinity for things English; it was believed he may have been content to dominate Europe/Western Asia and let England continue to run its empire at the margins. That quite probably is fantasy, but what is true is that England watched itself become irrelevant while behaving quite heroically throughout WWII.
It's interesting to hear him discuss the English schools and the administrative class that rose to prominence in the latter days of the Empire. I'm reading a book by Graham Greene right now, he's described as coming from that world.
Wilson's bio of Tolstoy is summed here.
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