Churchill's Bomb : How the United States Overtook Britain in the First Nuclear Arms Race
Churchill's Bomb : How the United States Overtook Britain in the First Nuclear Arms Race
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Author(s): Farmelo, Graham
ISBN No.: 9780465021956
Pages: 576
Year: 201310
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 41.39
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Financial Times "[A] story as gripping as it is elegantly argued and precise." Wall Street Journal "This book.shows a keen sense of the human comedy. Who were these people, and why did they behave the way they did?" The Daily Beast "This is a complex and engrossing history with obvious geopolitical import, but what's most interesting is the human drama involving Churchill, FDR, and the constellation of scientific egos circling around them. Farmelo also wonderfully draws out Churchill's surprising futurism, bound up with a strain of fatalism." Independent "Graham Farmelo''s very fine book . illuminates the nexus between science, politics, war, and even literature better than anything I have read for some time. The issues it raises are both eternal and especially pressing now.


It is not yet Book of the Year time but this has to be a contender." The Guardian "[A] dazzling book. Farmelo, prize-winning biographer of the physicist Paul Dirac, recounts this important story with skill and erudition." The Times (UK) " Churchill's Bomb tells an even more dramatic story [than Farmelo told in The Strangest Man], and tells it brilliantly. There are many books about the creation of nuclear weapons and even more about Churchill, but Farmelo's is the first that explains the latter's role in the former. Farmelo ingeniously interweaves the narratives of the nuclear scientists, many of them Jewish refugees from Germany, with that of Churchill in war and peace. As the Americans enter the picture the story becomes fiendishly complicated, but the author never loses the thread." The London Review of Books "Compelling.


The value of Farmelo's book is in its meticulous attention to the contingencies, accidents, uncertainties, inconsistencies and idiosyncratic personalities in the story of how Britain didn't get the Bomb during the war and how it did get it afterwards. It could all have turned out differently -- but it didn't." The Sunday Times "An excellent book. Farmelo is a splendid word-portraitist, and his book charts the odysseys, geographical as well as scientific, of the men who played a key role in developing the bomb. Authoritative and superbly readable." Maclean''s "Farmelo's writing is lyrical -- and is chock-full of personality." The New York Times Book Review "[Farmelo] tells this tale fluently. Churchill's Bomb illuminates significant flaws in Churchill's personality, policies and leadership.


" Scotsman "Graham Farmelo presents us with a story and an analysis which are so fresh and compelling that we might feel we have come to both subjects [Churchill and the nuclear bomb] for the first time. [S]crupulously researched and superbly written. Farmelo's style keeps us in suspense, and his book really is a page-turner. It is also a compendium of mini-biographies of all the significant players in this gargantuan story, each deftly and compassionately told, with touches of apt simile, wit and poignancy. Churchill's Bomb is a powerful and moving contribution to literature about the 20th century and to biographical and historical writing." The Economist " [Churchill's Bomb] scores some powerful points." Washington Post "On the eve of World War II, British scientists were well ahead of the United States in the basic research to make a nuclear weapon possible. How the United States wrested that leadership away from Great Britain is the topic of Graham Farmelo's account of a little-known aspect of the war.


[T]his is an interesting story." Times Higher Education "Splendid and original. Churchill's Bomb is at once a tribute to Churchill's foresight in seeing clearly in the inter-war period both the potential and the dangers of a form of energy that few believed would ever be harnessed, and a criticism of him for having allowed leadership in nuclear technology for industrial and military purposes to pass to the US. In interweaving the political and the scientific, Farmelo succeeds in making the latter beautifully clear even to readers with scant background in the subject. His book also shows that the quarrels between scientists can be just as fierce as those between politicians." The Observer (UK) "[An] absorbing account of 20th century atomic politics. Farmelo's account of Churchill's atomic dreams perfectly captures the essence of the man and of the science of the day." New Scientist "There is nothing like the fear of annihilation to focus the best minds on taking us to the next level of technical achievement.


Certainly this was Winston Churchill's option. As biographer Graham Farmelo shows in Churchill's Bomb , Churchill managed to redeem his faltering performance as a minister in the first world war by elevating the #145;atomic bomb' from a neologism created by H. G. Wells to an existential risk in one deft essay." Failure Magazine "In Churchill's Bomb , science historian Graham Farmelo reconstructs this intense, delicate, and near-Faustian story with wit, detail, and richness. [A] fine read for those who want a well written and researched single volume on atomic affairs from a British point of view." The Independent "[A] very fine book. Farmelo's book illuminates the nexus between science, politics, war, and even literature better than anything I have read for some time.


The issues it raises are both eternal and especially pressing now. It is not yet Book of the Year time but this has to be a contender." Physics World "Intriguing. Churchill's Bomb is a story of abject failure by the man widely considered to be the greatest Briton ever to have lived. [I]ts brilliance lies in the way the story is told, for it is a tale not just of physics or politics but also, more importantly, of people." Nature "The author, a physicist, ranges across Winston Churchill's long career. Farmelo is especially good on the Second World War years, revealing much about the Anglo-American relationship that has been guarded or unclear. Colourful.


" Kirkus "[A] nicely detailed and balanced record of the British ambivalence toward building an atom bomb in favor of the American effort. A tremendously useful soup-to-nuts study of how Britain and the U.S. embraced a frightening atomic age." Library Journal "Farmelo presents a well-written and deeply researched account of Britain's engagement in atomic research. Farmelo's study provides an excellent assessment of Churchill's role in the British effort and complements Richard Rhodes's classic The Making of the Atomic Bomb . A fine addition to the existing literature on the subject." Roger Highfield, Science Museum executive, Daily Telegraph columnist, and bestselling science writer "A riveting, powerful, and timely reminder that high politics is anything but rational.


Graham Farmelo vividly reveals how Winston Churchill learned about atomic physics in the 1920s, warned about the imminence of nuclear weapons in the 30s, and yet, paradoxically, squandered Britain''s lead in the field during the Second World War." Andrew Brown, author of Keeper of the Nuclear Conscience "Churchill's curiosity about science is perhaps the least studied aspect of his character. Graham Farmelo remedies that deficit in masterful style, beginning with Churchill's admiration for H G Wells and ending with a poignant portrait of the elderly statesman brooding over the prospect of nuclear Armageddon." Sir Michael Berry, University of Bristol "What a brilliant and compelling book! Graham Farmelo sensitively and eloquently deconstructs the twists and turns of Winston Churchill's involvement with nuclear weapons over nearly half a century, setting this unfamiliar tale in the context of the turbulent times. At its heart are the ambiguities of the World War II relationship between a scientifically innovative but economically weakened Britain and the inexhaustibly energetic USA with unlimited resources." James W. Muller, University of Alaska, Anchorage "An excellent book. Graham Farmelo draws on many sources to show how Churchill, his scientific adviser Frederick Lindemann, and a host of other scientists and politicians developed the atomic bomb.


Churchill's Bomb brings these characters back to life with anecdotes, quotations, and personal sketches. But Farmelo's book does more than unfold the hopes, doubts, and fears engendered by the bomb: it illuminates the relationship between big science and modern democracy." Mary Jo Nye, Professor of History Emerita, Oregon State University, and author of Michael Polanyi and His Generation "This is a fascinating book. Graham Farmelo offers a fresh and thoroughly resea.


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