The Kings Speech: How One Man Saved the British Monarchy
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Na zalihi
Težina | 343 g |
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Format | 14 × 22 cm |
Autor | |
Izdavač | |
Mjesto izdanja | London |
Godina | 2010 |
Broj stranica | 242 |
Uvez | Meki |
Stanje knjige | Vrlo dobro |
One man saved the British Royal Family in the first decades of the 20th century – he wasn’t a prime minister or an archbishop of Canterbury. He was an almost unknown, and self-taught, speech therapist named Lionel Logue, whom one newspaper in the 1930s famously dubbed ‘The Quack who saved a King’. Logue wasn’t a British aristocrat or even an Englishman – he was a commoner and an Australian to boot. Nevertheless it was the outgoing, amiable Logue who single-handedly turned the famously nervous, tongue-tied Duke of York into one of Britain’s greatest kings after his brother, Edward VIII, abdicated in 1936 over his love of Mrs Simpson. This is the previously untold story of the remarkable relationship between Logue and the haunted future King George VI, written with Logue’s grandson and…