Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 9th July 2024
Paperback
Published: 27th August 2024
Paperback
Published: 22nd October 2024
Henry Chips Channon: The Diaries (Volume 2): 1938-43
By (Author) Chips Channon
Cornerstone
Penguin (Cornerstone)
27th August 2024
16th May 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Autobiography: historical, political and military
Social and cultural history
941.082092
Paperback
1120
Width 130mm, Height 199mm, Spine 47mm
946g
'The greatest British diarist of the 20th century . . . finally, we are getting the full text, in all its bitchy, scintillating detail' Ben Macintyre 'A masterpiece - a time machine that transports the reader back to British politics and high society at the end of the 1930s.' Robert Harris 'An unrivalled guide to the social and political life of Britain in the first half of the 20th century.' Books of the Year, The Times 'Fascinating.' New Statesman 'Never a dull day, never a dull sentence.' Daily Mail _______________________________________________ The political career of Conservative MP Henry 'Chips' Channon (1897-1958) was unremarkable. His diaries are quite the opposite. Witty, gossipy and bitchy by turns, they are the unfettered observations of a man who went everywhere and knew everyone. This second of three volumes opens in October 1938 with Channon optimistically believing that his hero Neville Chamberlain can stave off a general European conflagration. It closes with the expression of his hope that Mussolini's fall from power in July 1943 means 'The war must be more than half over'. In the intervening pages, he charts diplomatic to-ings and fro-ings and political manouevring, hatches a plan to keep Yugoslavia in the Allied camp, dines with English high society and foreign royalty, and passes not-always-charitable judgements on contemporaries who range from Winston Churchill and General de Gaulle to Noel Coward and Oscar Wilde's erstwhile lover Lord Alfred Douglas.
Sir Henry (Chips) Channon was born in Chicago in 1897. The son of a wealthy businessman, he accompanied the American Red Cross to Paris in 1917, was an undergraduate at Christ Church, Oxford, and then settled in London where he enjoyed the high life. He married into the Guinness family, and became a Conservative MP for Southend from 1935 until his death. He knew or was friends with all the leading politicians and aristocrats of the period, wined and dined Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson in the months before the Abdication crisis, and observed at first hand the last days of appeasement.