Robert Schmuhl's Mr. Churchill in the White House is a lively, deeply researched and important contribution to our understanding of how large personalities confronting large challenges can change history.--E. J. Dionne Jr., Georgetown University
. . . this remarkable story of Winston Churchill visiting the White House multiple times offers a fresh perspective. You feel like you are a fly on the wall during his encounters with two Presidents.-- "Forbes"
Robert Schmuhl, author of Mr. Churchill in the White House, has annoyed me. What was meant to be a casual week-long read transformed into a captivating all-nighter flipping through the pages of a book I never knew I needed.-- "International Churchill Society"
If you know very little about the strategic issues surrounding World War 2 and the geopolitic world at the time, then this book is a must read for you. If you want to see what life is like when prying eyes are not on famous people, then this is your book. A tremendous amount of research went into creating this book. A companion to the classic, One Christmas In Washington.--Mr. N "N.N Light's Book Heaven"
This well-researched book... adds up to a fresh approach to an important piece of history.-- "Kirkus Reviews"
Historian Schmuhl (The Glory and the Burden) takes a novel approach to exploring mid-20th-century diplomatic relations between America and Britain in this winning history... The character portraits Schmuhl draws are vivid and transfixing as the leaders by turns cozy up and butt heads. WWII history buffs will be delighted.-- "Publishers Weekly"
Robert Schmuhl tells this hidden-in-plain-sight story with the kind of charm and humor you don't expect in a book on the War. This is a story to enjoy on a rainy day or if it's too hot to go outside. Indeed, "Mr. Churchill in the White House" is a book worth fishing for.--Terri Schlichenmeyer
A cursory online search suggests that 1,150 books have been written about Winston Churchill. He wrote 42 books himself, published in 70 volumes. Which raises the awkward questions: One more? Really? To which Robert Schmuhl's cheeky answer is "Yes!" And you know what? Mr. Churchill in the White House is both charming and provocative. What did Churchill really say when FDR rolled his wheelchair into the British prime minister's bathroom to find him in the pink and white altogether? Did these two brilliant and manipulative politicians ever permit friendship to overwhelm British or American national interest? It was a complex and meaningful relationship. Worth another book? This one? Absolutely.--Ted Koppel, award-winning anchor, ABC News Nightline; senior contributor, CBS News Sunday Morning
Robert Schmuhl admirably captures the vitality and cunning of Churchill's D.C. residency with consummate skill, colorful anecdotes, and crisp historical analysis.--Douglas Brinkley, author of Rightful Heritage: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Land of America
Churchill's time at the White House became legendary, and no foreign leader has captivated the American people in the same way since.--Matthew Costello, Director of the National Center for White House History
This is an informative, entertaining, and fast-paced account of Anglo-American summitry at the highest level, based on the accounts of those who were there.--Allen Packwood, director of the Churchill Archives Centre, Cambridge
Nudity, drinking, smoking: Winston Churchill's unusual diplomacy... His time at the White House serves as a case study in getting what you want.... Roosevelt knocked on the door of the prime minister's suite during Churchill's first White House visit in December 1941, only to find that 'Churchill was stark naked, a drink in one hand, a cigar in the other'.... This book is a case study in the savvy deployment of political 'soft skills'. Churchill knew when to push and when to flatter, when to lead and when to follow (or at least give the impression of following), how to charm and how to inspire. He also knew the value of good publicity: whatever he actually felt about Roosevelt and Eisenhower, it suited him to have the world believe they were great friends.... Such popularity has endured: American historians are still writing books about him nearly 80 years after his last White House visit.-- "The Economist"
Mr. Churchill in the White House showcases an essential point about the great Englishman's visits to the United States. Common history and shared interests will move nations in the same direction. Yet sometimes it takes the force of personality to bind them together. Mr. Schmuhl, an emeritus professor of American studies and journalism at the University of Notre Dame, "has found a fresh angle by focusing on the White House visits themselves, from the intimacies of the close quarters to the tensions hiding behind smiling pictures."-- "Wall Street Journal"