Hugh Trevor-Roper's life is a rich subject for a
biography - with elements of Greek tragedy, comedy and
moments of high farce. Clever, witty and sophisticated,
Trevor-Roper was the most brilliant historian of his
generation. Until his downfall, he seemed to have
everything: wealth and connections, a chair at Oxford, a
beautiful country house, an aristocratic wife, and,
eventually, a title of his own. Eloquent and versatile,
fearless and formidable, he moved easily between Oxford
and London, between the dreaming spires of scholarship
and the jostling corridors of power. He developed a
lucid prose style which he used to deadly effect. He was
notorious for his acerbic attacks on other historians,
but ultimately tainted his own reputation with a
catastrophic error when he authenticated the forged
'Hitler Diaries'. Adam Sisman sheds new light on this
fascinating and dramatic episode, but also shows that
there was much more to Hugh Trevor-Roper's career than
the fiasco of the Hitler Diaries hoax that became his
epitaph.From wartime code-breaking to grilling Nazis
while the trail was still fresh in 1945 (and finding
Hitler's will buried inside a bottle), to his
wide-ranging interests, his snobbery and his malice, his
formidable post-war feuds with Evelyn Waugh, Tawney,
Toynbee, Taylor and many others, and his secret and
passionate affair with an older, married woman. A study
in both success and failure, Adam Sisman's biography is
a revealing and personal story of a remarkable
life. |
|