This third and final volume of the unexpurgated diaries of Sir Henry
'Chips' Channon begins as the Second World War is turning in the Allies'
favour. It ends with Chips descending into poor health but still able to
turn a pointed phrase about the political events that swirl around him
and the great and the good with whom he mingles.
Throughout these final fourteen years Chips assiduously describes events
in and around Westminster, gossiping about individual MPs' ambitions and
indiscretions, but also rising powerfully to the occasion to capture the
mood of the House on VE Day or the ceremony of George VI's funeral. His
energies, though, are increasingly absorbed by a private life that at
times reaches Byzantine levels of complexity. We encounter the London of
the theatre and the cinema, peopled by such figures as John Gielgud,
Laurence Olivier, Vivien Leigh and Douglas Fairbanks Jr, as well as a
seemingly endless grand parties at which Chips might well rub shoulders
with Cecil Beaton, the Mountbattens, or any number of dethroned European
monarchs.
He has been described as 'The greatest British diarist of the 20th
century'. This final volume fully justifies that accolade.