Available Formats
The Last Days of the Spanish Republic
By (Author) Paul Preston
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
10th May 2017
4th May 2017
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Modern warfare
Specific wars and campaigns
Civil wars
946.08
Paperback
400
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 26mm
290g
Told for the first time in English, Paul Prestons new book tells the story of a preventable tragedy that cost many thousands of lives and ruined tens of thousands more at the end of the Spanish Civil War.
This is the story of an avoidable humanitarian tragedy that cost many thousands of lives and ruined tens of thousands more.
On 5 March 1939, the eternally malcontent Colonel Segismundo Casado launched a military coup against the government of Juan Negrn. To fulfil his ambition to go down in history as the man who ended the Spanish Civil War, he claimed that Negrn was the puppet of Moscow and that a coup was imminent to establish a Communist dictatorship. Instead his action ensured the Republic ended in catastrophe and shame.
Paul Preston, the leading historian of twentieth-century Spain, tells this shocking story for the first time in English. It is a harrowing tale of how the flawed decisions of politicans can lead to tragedy.
A Daily Telegraph Book of the Year
Preston's mission in life is to bring clarity to the confusing tragedy of the Spanish Civil War. This is his twelfth book on the war and its legacy [it] is written with the same sober lucidity that distinguishes the previous eleven The Times
Compelling and convincingly argued .the story of the final, tragic days of the Spanish Republic has never been told so clearly before. With a keen eye for historical detail and a painful sense of the human lives at stake, Preston paints a vivid portrait of those involved Spectator
Masterly and intensely moving in Preston, author of several award-winning books on the conflict, the reader could not hope for a more sure-footed guide Britons today know far less than they should about the Spanish Civil War our knowledge would be poorer still but for Preston's indefatigable scholarship, elegant prose and impeccable judgement Sunday Telegraph
Scholarly and authoritative Literary Review
Paul Preston is Prncipe de Asturias Professor of Contemporary Spanish History and Director of the Caada Blanch Centre of Contemporary Spanish Studies at the LSE. He was lecturer at the University of Reading then successively lecturer in, reader in and Professor of History at Queen Mary College, University of London. In 2006 he was awarded the International Ramon Llull Prize by the Catalan Government. Among his many works are The Triumph of Democracy in Spain (1986), Franco: A Biography (1993), A Concise History of the Spanish Civil War (1996), Comrades (1999), Doves of War: Four Women in Spain (2002), Juan Carlos (2004) and The Spanish Civil War (2006). He was decorated by Spanish King Juan Carlos a Comendador de la Orden de Mrito Civil and in 2007, the Gran Cruz de la Orden de Isabel la Catlica. In 2000 he was awarded a CBE.