Elusive Rothschild: The Life of Victor, Third Baron
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Product Description
The accomplishments and diversity of the interests of Victor, third Baron Rothschild were remarkable. A zoologist by choice and training, he also formed the finest collection of eighteenth century English books in private hands. In the Second World War he was head of counter-sabotage in MI5, also being responsible for ensuring that presents of food, drink and cigars to Winston Churchill contained no poison or bombs. He coordinated research for Shell, was the first director of Edward Heath's creation, known as the 'Think Tank'. He chaired the family business, N. M. Rothschild and Sons, and presided over the Royal Commission on Gambling. Then came the Blunt scandal. Ultimately declared innocent by Margaret Thatcher of having spied for Soviet Russia, Rothschild escaped prosecution for having breached the Official Secrets Act only after the humiliation of interrogation by Scotland Yard's Serious Crimes Squad. Yet he was the victim of what Kenneth Rose, his biographer, sees as a cruel and relentless campaign of denigration that temporarily obscured his achievements.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #128145 in Books
- Published on: 2003-03-13
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 320 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
A great extract for THE ELUSIVE ROTHSCHILD ran in the SUNDAY TELEGRAPH on Sunday 2nd March and the book was given a press date of 27th March. The review coverage so far has been great and still to come is the TLS (John Campbell) THE ELUSIVE ROTHSCHILD has also entered the EVENING STANDARD bestsellers list at number 5. 'Brilliant insider biography.'TATLER 'Victor Rothschild was a fascinating figure, in a fascinating period, and this biography splendidly evokes both the man and the world.'JWM Thompson, LITERARY REVIEW 'Rose's well-written, often entertaining biography is full of insights into Rothschild's extraordinary varied career...a memorable biography of an immensely talented man.'Christopher Andrew, SUNDAY TIMES 'The delight of this book...lies in the elegance of its prose... Anecdotes are recounted with perfect calibration, individuals summed up with a masterly choice of phrase...This book includes many superb new stories...Rose's honesty, decency and understanding of his friend -and his refusal to look the other way at the occasional acts of familial psychological sadism - shine through. Writing of this quality is as rare nowadays as that organism found only in the tear duct of the hippopotamus.'Andrew Roberts, THE DAILY TELEGRAPH '[a] rich and intimate biography.'Niall Ferguson, THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH '[a] friendly but probing biography.'Peter Lewis, DAILY MAIL (Critic's Choice) 'Kenneth Rose, who stands very high in the first division of biographers, has deployed his beautiful prose to paint a witty, subtleand sympathetic portrait. But, like a good painter, he gives us more than just a likeness of the sitter...Buy the book for not the tittle-tattle about spies, but because it tells you, by means of a fascinating (and sometimes very funny) story, a great deal about aspects of the 20th century, some good, and some terrible, which we should not forget.'William Waldegrave, EVENING STANDARD 'Kenneth Rose, has written an engaging account of an extraordinary life.'THE ECONOMIST '...a fine biography...Rose has an eye for a good story.'FrancisBeckett, NEW STATESMAN 'consistently entertaining...'Piers Brendon, THE OLDIE 'Kenneth Rose, an experienced biographer and historian, has an elegant turnof phrase.'JEWISH CHRONICLE '[a] superb biography...gripping reading.'Michael Hall, COUNTRY LIFE 'a lively and balanced view of one of the most interesting members of this distinguished family...the easy fluent style...makes the book a surprising page-turner.'THE HARROVIAN There has also been a full page review in the SPECATOR, by Jonathan Sumption, a full page review in the MAIL ON SUNDAY by Craig Brown (Book of the Week ***), a review in THE WEEK, a full page review in the TLS (John Campbell) and a news story in the CAMBRIDGE EVENI
From the Inside Flap
Victor, 3rd Baron Rothschild (1910-1990 ), lived the lives of a dozen men. Heir to a dynasty of bankers, he chose to be a zoologist whose studies on the love life of the sea urchin and other species in time bought him election to the Royal Society. 'Do not take frogs' eggs into the bank', King George V chaffed the young scientist. His leisure hours, too, glowed with promise and achievement. As a county cricketer he faced the bodyline bowling of Harold Larwood. He formed the most complete collection in private hands of English eighteenth-century first editions. He was an accomplished jazz pianist. Throughout the war he served in MI5 as head of counter-sabotage. One duty was to examine presents of food, drink and cigars sent to Winston Churchill in case they contained poison or explosives. For his cold courage in defusing a new type of time bomb hidden by German agents in ships bound for Britain he was awarded the George medal. Having spent a decade directing research for the Royal Dutch Shell group, he was chosen by Edward Heath to be the first head of the Think Tank that offered independent advice to the Cabinet on problems as diverse as race relations and nuclear reactors, Concorde and coal. The Whitehall mandarins resented Rothschild's intrusion, but he went on to be Chairman of the Royal Commission on Gambling and a member of the committee that advised Margaret Thatcher on the Poll Tax. His last years were clouded by misfortune. Among his early intimates at Cambridge were Guy Burgess and Anthony Blunt. When one defected to Moscow and the other confessed to having been a Soviet spy, those carefree friendships returned to haunt him. Pilloried in press and parliament, he sought vindication by unwise means. Kenneth Rose, Rothschild's friend and an acclaimed biographer, here unfolds the story of how this public-spirited patriot endured much humiliation before being cleared by Mrs Thatcher of having spied for Russia. Illustrated 20 in UK only Kenneth Rose's previous biographies include Superior Person, a life of Lord Curzon of Kedleston, Viceroy of India and Foreign Secretary; and The Later Cecils, a study of the Victorian prime minister Lord Salisbury and his family. His King George V won the Wolfson Award for History, the Whitbread Award for Biography and the Yorkshire Post Biography of the Year Award. He is a contributor to the Dictionary of National Biography. As a journalist, Kenneth Rose created the Albany column of the Sunday Telegraph which he wrote for thirty-six years. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and was awarded the CBE in 1997. Weidenfeld & Nicolson The Orion Publishing Group Orion House 5 Upper Saint Martin's Lane London, WC2H 9EA
About the Author
Kenneth Rose won the Whitbread Prize for his life of King George V. As a journalist he invented the Sunday Telegraph's 'Albany' column, having previously worked on the 'Peterborough' column on the Daily Telegraph. He is a contributor to the Dictionary of National Biography and was awarded the CBE in 1997. He lives in London, Kensington, W8.



