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Friends in youth

Minoo Dinshaw is appearing at the Chipping Campden Literature Festival on Thursday 8th May 2025 (details here).

Pre-order your Festival copy and receive 10% discount.

Please indicate in the NOTES field on the check-out page if you would like us to deliver the book to the Festival event.

Alternatively we can post the book to you (cost £3.70) or it can be collected from the shop in advance of the event.

Published by Allen Lane ISBN 9780241312827  Hardback

Original price was: £30.00.Current price is: £27.00.

In stock

Product ID: 80251 SKU: 9780241312827 Category:

Two old friends end up on opposite sides of the English Civil War, in this dazzling history from the acclaimed author of Outlandish KnightAt the Inns of Court, the intellectual, literary, and social heart of early 17th century London, many pivotal friendships were forged: few closer than that of Bulstrode Whitelocke and Edward (Ned) Hyde. Both young men were lively characters, industrious, well-connected, principled and optimistic.

They dreamed of reforming the government of Charles I, a young court with age-old problems, by restoring the traditional harmony of Crown and Parliament. This is the story of how their hopes climbed, overreached, and fell into an abyss of relentless civil war. This highly original, vivid and engaging book recreates the atmosphere, drama, players and ideas of what is arguably England’s (and Britain’s) most crucial and traumatic formative period.

Through the stories of his two protagonists, Minoo Dinshaw shows how subtle religious and political differences, careful personal judgments, and mere happenstance combined to place these two friends, most reluctantly, on opposite sides in the English Civil Wars. They would both survive, unlike many thousands of others, into old age; both would become influential historians, shaping how we still understand the conflicts of their age. But their friendship, like the once hopeful country in which it had first flourished, would be forever changed: permanently marred by what both men believed to be senseless and unnecessary civil strife.