"Enjoyable and informative...[Diana, Sarah, and Mary] deserve to have their full stories told as well. Trethewey gives them, and us, this long-overdue gift in The Churchill Sisters." The Washington Examiner
“Trethewey sheds new and fascinating light on the drama, passion and tragedy surrounding Diana, Sarah, Marigold and Mary, and the pivotal role each played in their father's illustrious political career…[a] richly drawn, gorgeously written group biography.” –Shelf Awareness (starred)
“[Trethewey] sets a brisk pace and succeeds in depicting a trio of intriguing women at a perilous moment in world affairs.” –Publishers Weekly
"This remarkable, sometimes tragic story of the daughters who supported their brilliant historical giant of a father will appeal to a broad range of readers...an engrossing and intelligent group biography." Kirkus Reviews
"Enthralling." The Bookseller (UK), Editor's Choice
“[The sisters’] lives were just as full of drama, passion and tragedy as the Mitfords…this intimate saga sheds much light on the complex dynamics of a family where forgiveness and acceptance were often required.” –The Bookshelf (UK)
"Trethewey has been able to shed invaluable new light on the tangled and occasionally fraught relationships that Churchill’s three adult daughters...each had with Winston, their mother Clementine, their brother Randolph, and each other...she has rightly produced a fine, uplifting work." Andrew Roberts, bestselling author of Churchill: Walking with Destiny
“A thoughtful portrait of the lives of three women on the forefront of history, but most importantly, a poignant story of sisterhood.” –Catherine Grace Katz, bestselling author of The Daughters of Yalta
“A delightful and fascinating study of an unexplored area of Churchill family life.” –Celia Sandys, author of Chasing Churchill and granddaughter of Winston Churchill
“An absorbing insight into the lives of their extraordinary daughters. With careful research and a sympathetic understanding of her subject matter, an enthralling study of this unconventional trio fills a void that had existed for too long.” –Shelagh Montague Browne, personal secretary to Clementine Churchill
“Churchill’s daughters were at the heart of his inner circle...this book puts them center stage and reveals both the scale of their contribution and the resulting personal cost.” –Allen Packwood, Director of the Churchill Archives Center at Cambridge University
“A fresh and fascinating insight both into Churchill as a father and his remarkable children.” –Andrew Lownie, bestselling author of The Mountbattens
“This fascinating book brings the lives of [Churchill's] daughters out of the shadows for the first time...the extraordinary talents and resilience of these remarkable women that shine through. A revelation.” –Andrew Wilson, award-winning author of Mad Girl’s Love Song: Sylvia Plath and Life Before Ted
“Comprehensively researched and lovingly detailed.” –Anne deCourcy, author of The Husband Hunters
09/27/2021
Journalist Trethewey (Before Wallis) delivers a breezy group biography of Winston Churchill’s surviving daughters Diana, Sarah, and Mary (Marigold, born in 1918, died of septicemia at age two). The girls’ mother, Clementine, took frequent vacations away from the family to guard her mental health, and as children they joined their father at political events and on the campaign trail. During WWII, they all took active roles in the war effort, as was expected of the prime minister’s daughters. Sarah, recently separated from her first husband, left her stage career to sign on with the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force, and accompanied her father to conferences with Allied leaders at Tehran and Yalta. Meanwhile, Diana, who was married to her second husband and raising children, served as an air-raid warden and worked in a munitions factory. After the war, she divorced again and struggled with mental health issues before dying by suicide in 1963. Mary, the “stable sister,” actively supported her politician husband’s career and raised five children. Trethewey’s less-than-robust historical context offers little insight on the sisters’ political influence on their father and the nation, but she sets a brisk pace and succeeds in depicting a trio of intriguing women at a perilous moment in world affairs. Women’s history buffs will be entertained. Illus. (Nov.)
06/01/2021
Diana, Sarah, and Mary-they were the Churchill sisters, each with a distinctive relationship with her father and all with a front-row seat at key events in history. (A fourth sister, Marigold, died young.) British journalist Trethewey tells their story, focusing on intimate family relationships. With a 60,000-copy first printing.
2021-09-28
An acclaimed British biographer spotlights Winston Churchill’s four daughters and the roles they played in the life of Britain’s most famous modern statesman.
Winston Churchill biographies number in the thousands, yet none have been dedicated to the daughters, Diana, Sarah, Marigold, and Mary. Drawing on archived and previously unpublished family letters, Trethewey offers lively portraits of the women who, along with their mother, Clementine, “creat[ed] the stable domestic life” she argues was key to Churchill’s many triumphs. Of the four daughters, one, Marigold, died as a toddler. The remaining three went on to lead lives that, though shaped by Churchillian privilege, followed different trajectories. Eldest daughter Diana “shared [Winston’s] passion for politics…and found campaigning exciting.” Yet she never quite received the “star” treatment their brother and political heir-apparent Randolph did. But it was Sarah who inherited “a touch of Churchill's genius” and who went on to earn acclaim as an actor and notoriety for the stormy personal life that signaled her self-destructive tendencies. Like her elder sister, the ambitious Sarah also had to contend with sexism from the men to whom she was romantically linked. By contrast, her younger sister Mary wanted nothing more than to marry and put the needs of her parents, sisters, and family first. At 23, writes the author, “she decided that she wanted to find ‘Mr Right’ and ‘live happily ever after’.” Mary accomplished her aim while also—and quite unexpectedly—finding the professional fulfillment that had eluded Diana and Sarah in the second half of her long life. This remarkable, sometimes tragic story of the daughters who supported their brilliant historical giant of a father will appeal to a broad range of readers including historians, feminist scholars, as well as audiences who enjoy highly readable biographies.
An engrossing and intelligent group biography.