Fake History: Ten Great Lies and How They Shaped the World
By (Author) Otto English
Headline Publishing Group
Headline Welbeck Non-Fiction
5th July 2022
28th April 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
Popular beliefs and controversial knowledge
Colonialism and imperialism
Disinformation and misinformation
909
Paperback
352
Width 128mm, Height 196mm, Spine 32mm
305g
'A brilliant and important book ... Five Stars!' - Mark Dolan, talkRADIO
'An important new book' - Daily Express
An alternative history of the world that exposes some of the biggest lies ever told and how they've been used over time.
Lincoln did not believe all men were created equal.
The Aztecs were not slaughtered by the Spanish Conquistadors.
And Churchill was not the man that people love to remember.
In this fascinating new book, journalist and author Otto English takes ten great lies from history and shows how our present continues to be manipulated by the fabrications of the past.
He looks at how so much of what we take to be historical fact is, in fact, fiction. From the myths of WW2 to the adventures of Columbus, and from the self-serving legends of 'great men' to the origins of curry - fake history is everywhere and used ever more to impact our modern world.
Setting out to redress the balance, English tears apart the lies propagated by politicians and think tanks, the grand narratives spun by populists and the media, the stories on your friend's Facebook feed and the tales you were told in childhood. And, in doing so, reclaims the truth from those who have perverted it.
Fake History exposes everything you weren't told in school and why you weren't taught it.
'A brilliant and important book ... Five Stars!' -- Mark Dolan, talkRADIO
'An important new book' * Daily Express *
'A wonderful dissection of some of history's heroes and villains who are unfairly castigated or wrongly glorified' * Scotsman *
Otto English is the pen name of author and journalist Andrew Scott. From 2010, Scott began writing and tweeting about politics and history, gaining attention for his itinerant blog, he moved into journalism and has since written forPolitico, theIndependent,New Statesman,Daily Mail and many other publications. He has always been fascinated by the writing of history and the creation of political narratives, and has spoken about them on BBC News, BBC Radio 4 and LBC. He lives in South East London with his wife and two children.