Praise for Cita Stelzer's Working with Winston:
"Working with Winston is a wonderful tour behind the scenes of history and its vignettes portray a very human and attractive man."-- "The Times (London)"
"Cita Stelzer has brilliantly hit upon the key fact about Winston Churchill's lifelong and intimate relationship with the United States. Although it was familial, strategic and political, it was overwhelmingly built on personal friendships, for which he had a preternatural gift. This superb book explores that phenomenon better than any other on the subject." --Andrew Roberts, New York Times bestselling author of Churchill: Walking with Destiny "A wonderful book that shines a bright light on fascinating years of Churchill's life and thus makes a valuable addition to Churchill scholarship. Churchill's American Network provides an engrossing account of an exceptional individual on tours across America before WWII, lecturing and gaining a deeper understanding of the nation and its people, and developing relationships that would prove of increasing importance when Hitler and the Nazis appeared on the world stage. A very illuminating and enjoyable book." --General David Petraeus, U.S. Army (Ret.), Former Director of the CIA; co-author with Andrew Roberts of Conflict: The Evolution of Warfare from 1945 to Ukraine "[A] lively account. Stelzer reminds readers that her subject was half American. As befitted his stature, he met the crème de la crème, including the president, Hollywood superstars, and wealthy industrialists, most of whom succumbed to his charms, often loaning him their mansions and private railroad carriages. A cheerful chronicle of Churchill's excursions in America."
--Kirkus Reviews
"Stelzer brings to life a cast of characters Churchill brought into his network, among them media giant William Randolph Hearst, actor and director Charlie Chaplin, journalist Edward R. Murrow, steel magnate Charles M. Schwab, and socialite and suffragist Daisy Harriman. Stelzer's scholarship on Churchill has been highly praised: 2019's Working With Winston explores the world of Churchill's secretaries, and 2013's Dinner With Churchill focuses on the prime minister's dinner table diplomacy. Churchill's American Network is another enlightening look at the statesman, one with an even broader scope. Fascinating."--BookPage
"Churchill embraced his dual heritage, and his long and circuitous path to 10 Downing Street was smoothed by supportive Americans seduced by his intellect and irrepressible energy. As Cita Stelzer explains in Churchill's American Network, he would rely on this support throughout his life. Ms. Stelzer relies on 'hundreds of press reports' to produce a series of colorful itineraries." --The Wall Street Journal "In her charming new book, Churchill's American Network: Winston Churchill and the Forging of the Special Relationship, author Cita Stelzer explains how this came to pass--in some respects, it was the culmination of decades of work. The young Briton continued to attract attention, including from American business and press leaders who recognized him as a rising star. These men and women proved key to developing Churchill's budding American network. And it is here that Stelzer's book really shines. The author details how Churchill cultivated a wide cast of influential Americans, some of whom, like the press magnate William Randolph Hearst, are well known, while others, like William McAdoo, a Treasury Secretary and future senator, have largely been forgotten."--Washington Free Beacon
"[An] engrossing new book."--Iain Martin, director of the London Defence Conference and publisher of Reaction
"As Keir Starmer ponders his recent trip to Washington DC, he would be wise to read Cita Stelzer's revelatory book, Churchill's American Network. This assured American academic, who brings fresh revelations and insights galore to her zingy rollercoaster of a chronicle, shows how Churchill's colleagues and friends helped push our foreign policy in Britain's favour during the Second World War. Her masterful piece of reportage demonstrates that, as is so often the case, it is as much who you know as what you know that can truly be advantageous - something, we learn, that Churchill proved in spades. Earning lucrative speaking fees to support his lavish lifestyle, Churchill became the ultimate networker irrepressible at singing for his supper. An indefatigable reporter herself, Stelzer has gathered contemporary local newspaper reports of Churchill's lecture tours in many American cities, as well as interactions with leaders of local American communities - what he said in public, what he said at private meetings, how he comported himself. It is comprehensive and compelling."
--Geordie Greig, Editor-in-Chief, The Independent