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Peace Makers

Shaping the Modern World: The Men and Women of the Foreign Office in WWII

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Peace Makers

By: Peter Ricketts
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About this listen

Peace Makers uncovers the hidden world of British diplomacy during the Second World War. Far from the quiet corridors of Whitehall, it was a stage for patriots and public servants, but also for charmers, chancers, eccentrics, and adventurers. Drawing on fresh research and vivid storytelling, the book reveals the extraordinary, often untold stories of the diplomats who shaped the war—and the world that followed.

More than a chronicle of strategy and statecraft, this is a deeply human story. Under the pressures of war, the Foreign Office began to change. Prejudices crumbled, especially around the role of women, and the wartime service paved the way for the more open, representative diplomacy of the post-war years. These accounts of persuasion, influence, and resilience remain as relevant today as they were in the 1940s. Firmly grounded in history but written for a wide readership, Peace Makers will appeal to fans of Max Hastings, Antony Beevor, and Ben Macintyre, as well as anyone interested in the hidden dramas of the war and the people who shaped the modern Foreign Office.

Peace Makers is profoundly relevant today because it shows how diplomacy, human ingenuity, and resilience can shape the course of history—even under extreme pressure. In an era of global uncertainty, where international cooperation is more crucial than ever, the book’s stories of persuasion, negotiation, and breaking down barriers offer timeless lessons. By highlighting the courage and creativity of diplomats, including the pioneering roles of women in the Foreign Office, it reminds us that progress often comes from those willing to challenge conventions. Far from being a distant historical account, Peace Makers illuminates the skills, values, and adaptability that remain essential for navigating the complex world we face now.

Chapters include:

1. Witness to disaster: the Paris Embassy and the fall of France

2. The price of peace for our time: the build-up to war

3. Adapting to survive: the war comes to Whitehall

4. Breaking down the barriers: women in the Foreign Office

5. Persuasion and propaganda: three women of the world

6. Being met together: the Atlantic Charter and the outlines of a new international order

7. Cheerful energy: eight months of lockdown in Tokyo

8. Keeping Spain neutral: diplomats and spies in wartime Madrid

9. Running risks in Rome: Francis d’Arcy Osborne’s four years in the Vatican

10. A walk in the Russian woods: Archibald Clark Kerr and the courting of Stalin

11. Shaping a better world: Gladwyn Jebb and the United Nations plan

12. Picking up the pieces: de Gaulle, Churchill and the making of an ally

13. Risking a false prospectus: Yalta and the limits of diplomacy

14. The last hard yards: from San Francisco to Potsdam

15. Winning the peace: the Foreign Office and the post-war world

©2026 Peter Ricketts (P)2026 Aurum

Critic Reviews

A fascinating and highly readable account of how the Foreign Office helped turned wartime victory into postwar peace, full of vivid quotes from the men and women—yes, lots of women—who served their country in little-known ways.
Prof. David Reynolds, Cambridge University

This wonderfully written book by Peter Ricketts about the war service of so many dedicated men and women in the British Foreign Office places them at long last where they rightly belong—in the pantheon of British 2nd world war heroes
Rt Hon Andrew Mitchell

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