Published by Francis Boutle in 2007, 345 pages. Paperback (N7551)
From the rear side cover: Artist, adventurer, soldier and politician, Philip Woods, 'King of Karelia' and Belfast's 'Fighting Colonel', participated in many of the dramatic events of the early twentieth century: he served with Baden-Powell in South Africa, joined the Ulster Volunteer Force to oppose Irish Home Rule on the eve of the Great War; then, as an officer of the Royal Irish Rifles, he was decorated for his bravery on the Somme. During 1918-1919, Woods accompanied the Allied expedition to revolutionary Russia, where he became embroiled in the struggle of the Karelian people for independence. In the 1920s, as an independent, non-sectarian member of the new Northern Irish parliament, shunned by the Unionist establishment, he witnessed the province's bitter politics at first hand, and dedicated himself to promoting religious and social reconciliation. In England in the 1930s, he unwittingly became involved with the notorious British Nazi, William Joyce ('Lord Haw-Haw').
This book on the history of Karelia is in two parts. Nick Baron’s engaging study of Philip Woods’ life and times is followed by Woods’ own entertaining and historically important memoir of Britain’s ill-fated intervention in Karelia during the Russian civil war, published here for the first time.
Condition of the book is generally very good. The covers have one or two very minor scuffs but are clean and bright, the spine is intact and all pages are clean, intact, unblemished and tightly bound.