In her latest book, Lynne Olson, author of the highly acclaimed Troublesome Young Men, focuses once again on Britain in World War II, this time from an American perspective. Citizens of London is the engrossing behind-the-scenes story of how the United States and Britain forged their crucial wartime alliance, as seen from the viewpoint of three key American players in London. Drawing from a wide variety of primary sources, Olson depicts the personal journeys of these men, who, determined to save Britain from Hitler, helped convince a cautious Franklin Roosevelt and reluctant American public to back the British at a critical time.
The three – Edward R. Murrow, the handsome, chain-smoking head of CBS News in Europe; Averell Harriman, the hard-driving millionaire who ran FDR’s Lend-Lease program in London; and John Gilbert Winant, the shy, idealistic U.S. ambassador to Britain – formed close ties with Winston Churchill and were drawn into Churchill’s official and family circles. So intense were their relationships with the Churchills that all of them were involved romantically with members of the prime minister’s family: Harriman and Murrow with Churchill’s daughter-in-law, Pamela, and Winant with his favorite daughter, Sarah.
Citizens of London, however, is more than the deeply human story of these three Americans and the world leaders they aided and influenced. It’s a compelling account of the transformative power of personal diplomacy. Above all, it’s a rich, panoramic tale of two cities: Washington, D.C., a lazy Southern town slowly growing into a hub of international power, and London, a staid, class-conscious capital transformed by war into a vibrant cosmopolitan metropolis, humming with energy, romance, excitement, and danger. To a number of Americans who spent time in wartime London and the rest of Britain, the country seemed like a kind of Brigadoon -- a magical place where courage, resolution, sacrifice, and sense of unity and common purposed triumphed, if only for a few short years.
Lynne Olson has been a reporter and writer since shortly after her graduation from the University of Arizona. In 1971, she went to work for the Associated Press in Salt Lake City, and in 1972, transferred to the AP’s San Francisco bureau, where she specialized in feature writing. Later that same year, Olson was named to AP’s top feature writing team in New York, which focused on developing and writing stories about the country’s rapidly changing social mores. In 1973, she was asked by the AP to become the wire service’s first woman correspondent in Moscow, and she moved to the AP’s foreign desk to prepare for the assignment. She was based in Moscow from 1974 to 1976, once again concentrating on feature stories but also covering such news events as the Apollo-Soyuz space mission and President Nixon’s visit to the Soviet Union. In 1976, Olson was reassigned to Washington, where she was chosen to cover Jimmy Carter’s presidential campaign.
After Carter became president, Olson joined the Washington bureau of the Baltimore Sun, where she covered national politics and eventually the White House. In 1981, she quit the Sun to become a freelance writer. She has written for such publications as the Washington Post, American Heritage, Smithsonian, Working Woman, Los Angeles Times Magazine, Ms., Elle, Glamour, Washington Journalism Review and Baltimore Magazine. She also taught journalism for five years as an assistant professor at American University in Washington.
Olson and her husband, Stanley Cloud, are co-authors of The Murrow Boys, which was named one of the best books in 1996 by Publishers Weekly. Freedom’s Daughters, Olson’s second book, is the first comprehensive history of women in the civil rights movement. Published by Scribner in February 2001, it won a Christopher Award in 2002. Olson joined with Cloud again to write A Question of Honor: The Kosciuszko Squadron: Forgotten Heroes of World War II, published by Alfred A. Knopf in September 2003.
Olson’s fourth book, Troublesome Young Men: The Rebels Who Brought Churchill to Power and Helped Save England, was published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux in April 2007. Drawing wide critical acclaim, it was named one of the top 10 books of 2007 by New York Times book reviewer William Grimes and was a finalist for the Los Angeles Book Prize in history.
Her latest book, Citizens of London: The Americans Who Stood with Britain in Its Darkest, Finest Hour was be published by Random House in February 2010.
评分
评分
评分
评分
这本书的文字,有一种独特的韵味,仿佛带着伦敦特有的气息。它不华丽,却足够深刻;它不煽情,却能直击人心。作者的语言,如同精致的雕刻,将每一个人物,每一个场景,都描绘得栩栩如生。我喜欢那种朴实而富有力量的叙述方式,它让我能够更加专注于故事本身,专注于人物的内心世界。书中的情节,跌宕起伏,充满了戏剧性,却又显得那么自然,那么真实。我仿佛能够看到,那些人物在历史的长河中,努力地挣扎,努力地生活,努力地去爱。
评分这本书不仅仅是一部小说,更像是一本关于人生的百科全书。它里面包含了太多的智慧和启示,让我受益匪浅。我从书中人物的经历中,看到了生命的脆弱与坚韧,看到了选择的艰难与意义,看到了希望的渺茫与伟大。作者的文字,如同清泉,洗涤着我内心的尘埃,让我对生活有了新的认识和感悟。我常常会在阅读过程中停下来,陷入沉思,思考书中所探讨的那些关于爱、关于失去、关于成长的命题。这些思考,让我变得更加成熟,也更加懂得珍惜生命中所拥有的一切。
评分初读这本书,我脑海中浮现的是一幅幅色彩斑斓的画面。那些人物,每一个都鲜活得仿佛就坐在我眼前,他们的笑容,他们的泪水,他们的挣扎,他们的坚持,都深深地触动了我。我被他们的命运牵引着,时而为他们的困境而揪心,时而为他们的成功而欢呼。作者在人物塑造上,展现了高超的技巧,没有脸谱化的英雄或反派,只有复杂而真实的人性。他们有优点,也有缺点,有光明的一面,也有阴影的角落。这种真实感,让我更容易与他们产生共鸣,也让我对人性的理解更加深刻。书中的情感描写,更是细腻动人,无论是荡气回肠的爱情,还是深沉厚重的友情,亦或是刻骨铭心的亲情,都被描绘得淋漓尽致,直击人心。我常常会被那些情感的波澜所打动,甚至潸然泪下。
评分阅读这本书的过程,就像是在一场精心设计的迷宫中探索,每一次转弯,都可能发现意想不到的惊喜。作者的叙事方式,充满了智慧和技巧,他巧妙地运用伏笔和暗示,让故事层层推进,引人入胜。我常常会因为一个突如其来的转折而感到震惊,又会因为一个看似不起眼的细节而恍然大悟。这种智力上的挑战,让我欲罢不能。同时,书中对于一些社会现象的探讨,也发人深省。作者并没有直接给出答案,而是通过故事,引导读者去思考,去品味。这种开放性的结局,让我回味无穷,也让我对现实生活有了更深的思考。
评分每当我翻开这本书,都仿佛走进了一个全新的世界,一个充满着神秘与惊喜的世界。作者的想象力,是如此的丰富和辽阔,他能够将看似普通的生活,描绘得如此引人入胜,如此扣人心弦。我喜欢那种故事中蕴含的淡淡的忧伤,以及在那忧伤中闪烁的希望的光芒。这种矛盾的结合,让故事更加具有感染力,更加能够打动人心。书中的人物,也并非完美无缺,他们都有自己的缺点和过失,但正是这些缺点和过失,让他们变得更加真实,更加可爱。
评分我不得不承认,这本书的阅读体验,是极其愉悦的。作者的叙事节奏把握得恰到好处,既不会让人感到枯燥,也不会让人感到过于仓促。每一个情节的展开,都显得顺理成章,引人入胜。而人物的塑造,更是堪称一绝,他们有血有肉,有情有义,让我对他们产生了深深的喜爱。我喜欢那种故事中弥漫着的浓浓的人情味,它让我感受到了温暖,感受到了希望。这本书,无疑是一部值得反复阅读的佳作,它会在我的书架上占据一个重要的位置。
评分这本书带给我的,是一种前所未有的沉浸式阅读体验。我感觉自己不仅仅是在阅读一个故事,更是在经历一段人生。伦敦的街景,在我的脑海中逐渐清晰,我仿佛能看到那些古老的教堂、繁忙的码头,以及熙熙攘攘的人群。作者用精炼的语言,勾勒出一幅幅生动的画面,让我对那个时代的伦敦有了更直观的认识。而书中的人物,更是让我难以忘怀。他们的故事,交织在一起,构成了一曲关于生活、关于梦想、关于坚持的宏大乐章。我跟着他们一起笑,一起哭,一起经历风雨,一起迎接彩虹。这种代入感,是我在阅读其他书籍时很少能体会到的。
评分这本书给我带来的,是一种难以言喻的感动。我被书中人物的坚韧和乐观所折服,被他们面对困境时所展现出的勇气所震撼。作者用充满人文关怀的笔触,描绘了这些普通人的故事,让他们在历史的洪流中,闪耀出独特的光芒。我常常会在阅读过程中,停下来,去思考,去感悟。我思考人生的意义,思考爱的价值,思考生命的脆弱与坚强。这些思考,让我变得更加成熟,也更加懂得感恩。
评分我必须说,这本书是我近几年来读过的最令人难忘的作品之一。它的魅力,在于它能够触及人内心最柔软的部分,唤醒那些被遗忘的情感,引发那些深藏的思考。作者用真挚的情感,描绘了一幅幅动人的画面,让我看到了人性的光辉,也看到了生活的无常。我跟着书中的人物,经历了他们的喜怒哀乐,他们的爱恨情仇,他们的悲欢离合。这些经历,如同烙印一般,深深地刻在了我的心中。我时常会在夜深人静的时候,想起书中的某些场景,某些对话,它们在我脑海中反复回响,让我感慨万千。
评分这本书,我几乎是捧着不撒手,从翻开第一页起,就被深深地吸引了。作者的笔触,如同涓涓细流,却能汇聚成汹涌澎湃的情感洪流,将我完全包裹其中。故事发生的地点,伦敦,这个我一直心驰神往的城市,在作者的描绘下,仿佛拥有了鲜活的生命。它不再是地图上冰冷的坐标,而是充满了历史的尘埃、街头的喧嚣、古老建筑的低语,以及无数普通人在此编织的悲欢离合。我尤其喜欢作者对于细节的刻画,无论是咖啡馆里氤氲的香气,还是雨丝落在鹅卵石街道上的声音,亦或是人们脸上转瞬即逝的表情,都被捕捉得细腻入微,栩栩如生。这些细致入微的描写,让我仿佛置身于那个时代,成为了故事中的一员,与书中的人物一同呼吸,一同感受。
评分Greatest book I've read this year.
评分Greatest book I've read this year.
评分Greatest book I've read this year.
评分Greatest book I've read this year.
评分Greatest book I've read this year.
本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有