Hugh Bicheno

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Hugh Bicheno (19 January 1948 – 11 November 2023[1]) was a political risk analyst and an historian of conflict. He was best known for his interpretations of the Falklands War in Razor's Edge: The Unofficial History of the Falklands War and of the American Revolution in Rebels and Redcoats: The American Revolutionary War.

Biography

Bicheno was born in

Secret Intelligence Service, serving in Buenos Aires during the 'Dirty War.'[citation needed
]

Later he became a security consultant specialising in kidnap negotiations and was the adviser in 27 cases. He lived in Italy and then in Guatemala before moving to the United States for several years and becoming a naturalised citizen. He returned to England to pursue his life-long ambition to write books about conflict.[citation needed]

He was bilingual English-Spanish, spoke and read Italian and French.

Writing

Reviewing Razor's Edge, the late and eminent military historian Sir John Keegan commented that "It may seem impossible for anything original to appear about the Falklands War, so much has been written about it, but Hugh Bicheno's book is that thing . . . readers will find this book gripping and discomfiting."[2]

Sir Max Hastings, who took part in the campaign as a journalist and co-wrote the first and still highly regarded account of the war, commented: "Bicheno understands how battles are fought, and explains those of the Falklands better than any other writer has done . . . he knows how soldiers fight battles and has done us all a service by explaining them so well for a new generation."[citation needed]

Bicheno collaborated with his friend the late Richard Holmes on Battlefields of the Second World War, In the Footsteps of Churchill and The World at War. Holmes wrote the prefaces to Rebels and Redcoats and Razor's Edge and also made a television series adaptation of Rebels and Redcoats.[citation needed]

Works

References

  1. ^ "Hugh Bicheno". Facebook. 11 November 2023. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  2. ^ Keegan, John (16 April 2006). "How we won the war in the wet Malvinas". The Telegraph. Retrieved 28 February 2014.