Writing
When Churchill assumed office in 1940, he intended to write a history of the war then beginning. He said several times: "I will leave judgements on this matter to history—but I will be one of the historians." To circumvent the rules against the use of official documents, he took the precaution throughout the war of having a weekly summary of correspondence, minutes, memoranda and other documents printed in galleys and headed "Prime Minister's personal minutes". These were then stored at his home and Churchill wrote or dictated letters and memoranda with the intention of placing his views on the record, for later use as a historian. The arrangements became a source of controversy when ''The Second World War'' began appearing in 1948. Churchill was a politician, not an academic historian and was Leader of the Opposition, intending to return to office, so Churchill's access to Cabinet, military and diplomatic records denied to other historians was questioned. It was not known at the time that Churchill had done a deal with Clement Attlee and the Labour government which came to office in 1945. Attlee agreed to allow Churchill's research assistants access to all documents, provided that no official secrets were revealed, the documents were not used for party political purposes and the typescript was vetted by the Cabinet Secretary, Sir Norman Brook. Brook took a close interest in the books and rewrote some sections to ensure that British interests were not harmed or the government embarrassed. Churchill's privileged access to documents and his knowledge gave him an advantage over other historians of the Second World War for many years. The books had enormous sales in both Britain and the United States and made Churchill a rich man for the first time. The gathered documents were placed in chronologies by his advisers, and this store of material was further supplemented by dictated recollections of key episodes, together with queries about chronology, location and personalities for his team to resolve. Churchill also wrote to many fellow actors requesting documents and comments. Once all was collected and collated, Churchill began writing in earnest, dictating almost all of the work, with the notable exception of several long passages in Volume I. As various archives have been opened, several deficiencies of the work have become apparent. Some of these are inherent in the position Churchill occupied as a former prime minister and a serving politician. He could not reveal ongoing military secrets, such as the work of the code breakers atLegacy
''The Second World War'' can be read by students of the period as a memoir by a leading participant, rather than a comprehensive history by a professional and detached historian. The Second World War, particularly the period from when Britain fought with the support of the Empire and a few Allies, was the climax of Churchill's career and his inside story of those days is unique and invaluable. American historian Raymond Callahan, reviewing ''In Command of History'' by David Reynolds about Churchill's ''The Second World War'', wrote: Callahan concluded that notwithstanding any changes to historians' understanding of the book, now that what Churchill wrote has been compared in detail to the released archives, Churchill "remains the arresting figure he has always been—dynamic, often wrong, but the indispensable leader" who led Britain to "its last, terribly costly, imperial victory." In Callahan's view, Churchill was guilty of "carefully reconstructing the story" to suit his postwar political goals.Editions
''The Second World War'' has been issued in editions of six, twelve and four volumes, as well as a single-volume abridgment. Some volumes in these editions share names, such as ''Triumph and Tragedy'', but the contents of the volumes differ, covering varying portions of the book. The country of first publication was the United States, preceding publication in the United Kingdom by six months. This was a consequence of the many last minute changes which Churchill insisted be made to the London Cassell edition, which he considered to be definitive. ; First edition (hardcover) in six volumes # ''The Gathering Storm'' (1948) # ''Their Finest Hour'' (1949) # ''The Grand Alliance'' (1950) # ''The Hinge of Fate'' (1950) # ''Closing the Ring'' (1951) # ''Triumph and Tragedy'' (1953) ; Full paperback edition in twelve volumes # ''The Gathering Storm'' # ''The Twilight War'' # ''The Fall of France'' # ''The Commonwealth Alone'' # ''Germany Drives East'' # ''War Comes to America'' # ''The Onslaught of Japan'' # ''Victory in Africa'' # ''The Invasion of Italy'' # ''Assault from the Air'' # ''The Tide of Victory'' # ''Triumph and Tragedy'' ; Condensed edition in four volumesSee also
* ''General bibliography
* * *Citations
External links
* * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Second World War 1948 non-fiction books 1949 non-fiction books 1950 non-fiction books 1951 non-fiction books 1953 non-fiction books Books by Winston Churchill Book series introduced in 1948 English non-fiction literature History books about the United Kingdom Series of history books about World War II Books written by prime ministers of the United Kingdom Quotes (see winston Churchill wikiquote)