The Queen
- 192 Seiten
- 7 Lesestunden
From the author of the critically acclaimed Victoria comes a celebration of the life and times of Queen Elizabeth II.
Andrew Norman Wilson beschäftigt sich mit kritischen Biografien, Romanen, populärer Geschichte und religiösen Ansichten. Seine Werke erforschen tiefgründige Themen mit einer scharfen Weltsicht. Er schreibt in einem scharfsinnigen Stil, der das Wesen seiner Subjekte aufdeckt. Sein literarischer Ansatz ist unverwechselbar und fesselnd.






From the author of the critically acclaimed Victoria comes a celebration of the life and times of Queen Elizabeth II.
A brilliant and insightful celebration of the imaginative genius of Charles Dickens, published to commemorate the 150th anniversary of his death.
The magnificent and definitive biography of Prince Albert, by one of Britain's best biographers and the author of Victoria: A Life.
A Short History
From Chaucer to Churchill, from Pepys to Dickens - the great figures from London's past all make their appearance in A. N. Wilson's affectionate and passionate account of one of the world's greatest cities. Dramatic events are here too - from the Great Fire to the Blitz, from the Peasants' Revolt to Mosley's fascist rallies. But he also looks at the physical transformations of the city: the elegant squares and pleasure gardens of the 18th century; the prodigious expansion of the 19th century and the Railway Age. He moves through the First World War and the 'Big Bang' of the 1980s to celebrate the cosmopolitan nature of modern London while deploring the follies of recent urban planning.
Schets van het geleidelijke afscheid in wetenschap en cultuur in Engeland in de 18e en 19e eeuw van het theïstische godsbeeld.
In this work, A.N. Wilson's account shows how the decline of religious certainty in Victorian times had its origin with the 18th-century sceptics, and brought a devastating sense of emotional loss which extends to our own times.
It begins on the road to Damascus, in a moment graven on the consciousness of Western civilization. "Saul, Saul", asks the crucified Jesus of Nazareth, "why persecutest thou me?" From this experience, & from the response of the Jewish merchant later known as Paul, springs the Christian Church as we know it today. For as A.N. Wilson makes clear in this gripping narrative, Christianity without Paul is quite literally nothing. Jesus, with the layers of scholarship & ceremony stripped away, is a fastidious & fervent Jew who will lead his followers into a stricter, purer observance of Judaism. It's Paul who will claim divinity for him, who will transform him into the Messiah, center of an entirely new religion. In Wilson's astute narrative, we see Paul negotiating the dangerous political currents of the Roman Empire, making converts, & writing the great epistles that define our understanding of Christ & of the sublime paradoxes of his teaching. What drove Paul? What would he think of what his church has become? The answers lie in this biography, which lays bare the psychological journey of Christianity's true inventor.
Kritische levensbeschrijving.