DIANA PRESTON is a prize-winning historian and the author of Eight Days at Yalta, A Higher Form of Killing, Lusitania: An Epic Tragedy, Before the Fallout: From Marie Curie to Hiroshima (winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Science and Technology), The Boxer Rebellion, Paradise in Chains, and A Pirate of Exquisite Mind, among other works of acclaimed narrative history. She and her husband, Michael, live in London.
Praise for The Evolution of Charles Darwin: An exciting biography of the immortal naturalist's legendary journey . . . It was well into the 20th century before essentially all scientists agreed that Darwin was on the right track. Since then, biographies have poured off the presses, but readers cannot go wrong with this expert account. An irresistible scientific biography and adventure story with a happy ending. -Kirkus Reviews (starred review) While much has been written about Darwin's revolutionary scientific achievements on this journey, historian Preston sheds light on the voyage itself, its captain and crew, and the Native populations they encountered. -Booklist (starred review) A brisk and accessible account of how Charles Darwin developed his theory of natural selection . . . A rewarding look at the development of an earth-shattering idea. -Publishers Weekly Darwin was only 22 when he boarded the HMS Beagle in 1830 under the command of Robert FitzRoy as a 'gentleman naturalist,' unaware his name would one day grace an award honouring humans who remove themselves from the gene pool through misadventure. Drawing on the naturalist's diaries, Preston's biography reveals a man who, in his chauvinism and blind patriotism, was typical of his time-but in his liberal- and abolition-mindedness, atypical as well. -Globe and Mail Praise for Eight Days at Yalta: A colorful chronicle of high-stakes negotiations and a study in human frailties, missteps, and ideological blunders. -Washington Post Ms. Preston's conference narrative abjures authorial hindsight judgments, placing the spotlight instead on the characters' natural blind spots and biases. She also devotes a full third of the book to the summit's historical context and personalities, the latter of which are nicely developed. -Wall Street Journal A highly readable, highly detailed account of the historic meetings and often difficult and contentious negotiations between Churchill, Roosevelt, Stalin, and their staffs, and a vivid description of the once ornate Tsarist palaces and their much deteriorated wartime condition that served as the setting for meetings, dinners, and private talks. -New York Journal of Books Lively and nuanced . . . Shrewd on the main personalities . . . Preston goes beyond the horse-trading of three old men, with vivid scene-setting of the tsarist palaces where the conference took place. -Times (UK) In this well-written and absorbing book, Diana Preston provides a chronological narrative of these crucial eight days. -Airmail On the Yalta conference's 75th anniversary, this insightful history recounts its enormous, if teeth-gnashing, accomplishments . . . Impressively researched . . . An expert account of an unedifying milestone at the dawn of the Cold War. -Kirkus Reviews [A] spirited, behind-the-scenes account of the February 1945 Yalta Conference. Preston mixes foreign policy critique . . . with vibrant descriptions of backstage activities . . . Colorful personalities, piquant details, and a diverse array of perspectives make this a satisfying introduction to the subject. -Publishers Weekly Praise for Diana Preston: A treasure map of a book. -San Diego Union-Tribune, on A Pirate of Exquisite Mind A superbly rendered popular history. -Booklist (starred review), on A Pirate of Exquisite Mind Unforgettable . . . The definitive account of the Lusitania. -Philadelphia Inquirer, on Lusitania: An Epic Tragedy As majestic as its subject . . . Extraordinarily readable. -Chicago Sun-Times, on Lusitania: An Epic Tragedy An engaging narrative . . . Rich in detail and texture. -San Diego Union Tribune, on Before the Fallout: From Marie Curie to Hiroshima Ultimately this book is about survival, and the author engagingly recounts the nearly impossible task of trying to establish a penal colony with few supplies and poor agricultural conditions. Preston shines in her description of the true nature of Captain Bligh . . . A wonderful look into the beginnings of Australia and the remarkable strength of the survivors of these dangerous voyages. -Kirkus Reviews, on Paradise in Chains