Mr. Crewe's Career

Novel by Winston Churchill
Mr. Crewe's Career
Advertisement for Mr. Crewe's Career in the New York Tribune
AuthorWinston Churchill
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovel
PublisherMacmillan
Publication date
May 1908
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages498 pp

Mr. Crewe's Career is a 1908 best-selling novel by American writer Winston Churchill.

The novel tells the story of a railroad lobby's attempts to control the New Hampshire state government using all possible tactics. Churchill's prior novel Coniston was also a political novel, and the successor draws from Churchill's own unsuccessful run for Governor of New Hampshire in 1906.[1]

Though the book was perhaps not as praised as Coniston, it was generally well-received and popular.[2][3][4] It was the best-selling novel in the United States in 1908. Playwright Marion Fairfax also adapted the novel into a play which opened in New Haven, Connecticut in December 1908.[5]

References

  1. ^ (May 9, 1908). MR. CREWE'S CAREER: Winston Churchill's Latest Novel Another Story of Political Conditions in New Hampshire -- A Picture of Popular Uprising Against Railroad Domination, The New York Times
  2. ^ Schneider, Robert W. Novelist to a Generation: The Life and Thought of Winston Churchill, p. 126 (1976)
  3. ^ (May 9, 1908). A Notable American Story of Love and Politics (book review), New York Tribune, p.5, col. 1.
  4. ^ (May 24, 1908). Mr. Crewe's Career (review), San Francisco Call
  5. ^ (December 29, 1908). 'MR. CREWE'S CAREER' STAGED; Play Is a Dramatization of Winston Churchill's Political Novel, The New York Times

External links

  • Mr. Crewe's Career at Project Gutenberg
  • v
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Winston Churchill (novelist)
Novels
  • The Celebrity (1897)
  • Richard Carvel (1899)
  • The Crisis (1901)
  • The Crossing (1904)
  • Coniston (1906)
  • Mr. Crewe's Career (1908)
  • A Modern Chronicle (1910)
  • The Inside of the Cup (1913)
  • A Far Country (1915)
  • The Dwelling-Place of Light (1917)
  • The Green Bay Tree (unpublished)
Other writings


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