
Availability
Availability Label | Location | Shelfmark | Availability | Reservations |
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Central Branch | Non 941.50821092 MacI | On loan until: 04/Sep/25 |
7 | |
Central Branch | Non 941.50821092 MacI | On loan until: 05/Sep/25 |
7 | |
Sydenham Branch | Non 941.50821092 MacI | On loan until: 05/Sep/25 |
7 |
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Tell us what you thought about An accidental villain
Summary & Details
Full Record Details Table
Title Statement | An accidental villain: a soldier's tale of war, deceit and exile / Linden MacIntyre. |
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Author | MacIntyre, Linden |
Publication | Toronto, ON: Random House Canada,2025. |
Extent of Item | xiv, 346 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates |
ISBN | 9780735282025 (hardcover) |
Other Number | pr08017525 |
Bibliography | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Summary | "The bestselling, prize-winning novelist and broadcast journalist draws back the curtain on the shadowy life of Sir Hugh Tudor, Winston Churchill's lifelong friend, who, as head of the notorious Black and Tans in Ireland post-WWI, met civil strife and terror with state-sanctioned murder, and changed the course of Irish history. After distinguishing himself on the battlefields of the First World War, Major-General Sir Hugh Tudor could have sought a respectable retirement in England, his duty done. But, in 1920, his old friend Winston Churchill, minster of war in Lloyd George's cabinet, called Tudor to serve in a very different kind of conflict -- one fought in the Irish streets and countryside against an enemy determined to resist British colonial authority to the death. And soon Tudor, newly responsible for policing Ireland, was directing a brutal campaign of terror against rebel "terrorists" in the Irish War of Independence, a conflict he didn't entirely understand but was determined to win at all costs. Which included utilizing police death squads and inflicting brutal reprisals against IRA members and supporters and Sinn Féin politicians. Tudor left few traces of his time in Ireland. No diary or letters that might explain his record as commander of the notorious Black and Tans. Nothing to justify his role in Bloody Sunday, November 21, 1920, when his men infamously slaughtered Irish football fans. Was this retaliation for the IRA's earlier murder of British military officers? Also, why did a man knighted for his efforts in Ireland leave his family and homeland in 1925, moving across the sea to Newfoundland where he remained in quiet obscurity until he died forty years later? Linden MacIntyre -- a storyteller and journalist long fascinated with the toll of violence and war -- has spent four years tracking Tudor through archives, contemporaries' diaries and letters, and the body count of that Irish war, in search of answers. And in An Accidental Villain, he delivers up a consequential and fascinating account of how events can bring a man to the point where he acts against his own training, principles and inclination in the service of a cause -- and ends up on a long journey towards personal oblivion"-- |
Subjects & Genres | |
By Topic | Soldiers--Biography--Great Britain |
By Name | Tudor, Hugh,1871-1965 |
Royal Irish Constabulary Reserve Force | |
By Location | Ireland--History--War of Independence, 1919-1921 |
Ireland--Politics and government--1910-1921 | |
By Genre | Biographies |
Personal narratives |