N. A. M. Rodger is Emeritus Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford and former Professor of Naval History at the University of Exeter. He has been awarded the Julian Corbett Prize in Naval History, the Duke of Westminster's Medal for Military Literature, the British Academy Book prize, the Hattendorf Prize, and the Caird Medal of the National Maritime Museum.
Nicholas Rodger is our foremost naval historian … At last, with The Price of Victory, NAM Rodger’s great history of naval warfare is complete – and this final volume is a fascinating triumph … deeply-researched -- Simon Heffer * Telegraph * Within Rodger’s pages is everything you will ever need to know about the evolution of warships and their weapons across a century and a half. Throughout, the author is clear-sighted about the over-rigid exercise of command at sea ... The book’s chapters on the navy’s social history are among its best, highlighting the elevation of loyalty as a supreme virtue, discouraging junior officers from thinking for themselves ... Rodger writes with such authority [and] pays just tribute to the contribution of the women of the Women’s Royal Naval Service -- Max Hastings * Sunday Times * Magisterial … a very considerable and scholarly work of synthesis which will provide a baseline for future work on Britain and its naval history for a generation or more -- Jonathan Boff * Spectator * This mighty book, the concluding volume of a trilogy chronicling the history of the Royal Navy, is the size of an aircraft carrier. Covering the years 1815-1945, Volume III weighs in at nearly 1,000 pages. Max Hastings is right to describe it as a “great work”, full of “unfamiliar facts and magisterial judgments -- Robbie Millen * Saturday Times * The Price of Victory: A naval history of Britain 1815–1945 is the third and final volume of a thirty-year enterprise telling the story of our country and her navy. This one covers the period when Britannia really did rule the waves globally, and masters logistics as well as strategy. -- Andrew Roberts * Times Literary Supplement, Books of the Year * Erudite, engaging ... The Price of Victory covers the most densely studied period of naval history in Britain and beyond. This book, and the trilogy that it completes, are testimony to the dedication of a great scholar, the support of institutions and individuals, and the many audiences in the academy, and beyond, that have taken it to heart ... As post-Brexit Britain ponders the obvious question of where next, this timely text emphasizes the critical place of the sea and the Navy in the making of the modern state. Rodger has completed a majestic trilogy, one that stretches back to the time when King Alfred first put to sea to stop Viking invaders, with an incisive, compelling assessment of an era that began with Britain at the peak of its relative power, shaping the defeat of Napoleon and a new European system, and ended with the defeat of fascist Italy, Nazi Germany and imperial Japan [and] continue[s] the argument into the present. -- Andrew Lambert * Times Literary Supplement * Majestic ... This third volume, delayed by serious illness, brings us up to date and completes an achievement that is unlikely to be repeated, certainly not with such breadth, scholarship and wit. Rodger shows in gripping detail the ingenuity and assiduity that eventually made the navy into such a formidable fighting force, able to operate all over the world and embark on long and gruelling tours of duty. -- Ferdinand Mount * London Review of Books * We have waited 20 years for the final instalment of Rodger's trilogy on the naval history of Britain from the seventh century to the 20th ... it [is] just as thrilling as the two previous volumes -- Yuan Yi Zhu * History Today, Books of the Year *