We a good story
Quick delivery in the UK

Books in the Conference on British Studies Biographical Series series

Filter
Filter
Sort bySort Series order
  • - An Intellectual Biography
    by L.P. Carpenter
    £29.99

    A sensitive analysis of the thought and intellectual development of G. D. H. Cole (1889-1959) the distinguished Labour historian. Cole's career is traced from his earliest days in the Labour movement to his final years as Chichele Professor of Social and Political Thought at Oxford.

  • - Radical Plutocrat 1842-1919
    by Stephen E. (Columbia University) Koss
    £40.99

    Sir John Brunner, the son of a Swiss schoolmaster who settled in England, was co-founder of Brunner, Mond and Company, one of the great English chemical firms of the nineteenth century and the predecessor of ICI. Always interested in politics, Brunner entered Parliament after his industrial activities had already won for him a reputation as the `Chemical Croesus'.

  • - A Political Biography
    by Sydney H. (Rutgers University Zebel
    £43.49

    This biography analyses the long political career of Arthur James Balfour (1848-1930), the Conservative politician who became the first Earl of Balfour. Professor Zebel stresses the extraordinary nature of Balfour's career, divided as it was into two specific periods.

  • by John W. Osborne
    £29.99

    This is a biography of Major John Cartwright (1740-1824), the English advocate of radical reform who had considerable influence in shaping the mainstream of reform in England in the nineteenth century, and whose ideas lay behind the working-class Chartist Movement.

  • - The Transformation of a Victorian Liberal
    by Jr Spinner
    £31.99

    The career of George Joachim Goschen, the man whom Lord Randolph Churchill forgot, illuminates many of the problems faced by the British ruling classes in the late nineteenth century: a Liberal in 1863, Goschen entered the twentieth century a Conservative.

  • - H. W. Massingham (1860-1924)
    by Alfred F. (Amherst College Havighurst
    £40.99

    The first study of the career of H. W. Massingham, an outstanding journalist early in the twentieth century when editors were often ranked equal in significance with ministers of state. Massingham featured most significantly in the history of the press as editor of the Star, the Daily Chronicle and finally the Nation.

Join thousands of book lovers

Sign up to our newsletter and receive discounts and inspiration for your next reading experience.