”Chips”: The Diaries of Sir Henry Channon is a sophisticated and delightfully snarky glimpse of life among the British elite in the thirties, forties and fifties. Channon was a Tory MP in the thirties, an insider during the premiership of Neville Chamberlain, and a fringe participant in Churchill's regime. Chips' diaries lend firsthand detail to the Abdication Crisis, the Munich negotiations, and London life and politics throughout World War II. Despite many years in Parliament, Channon's political influence was peripheral, but with his diaries he left an indelible legacy.
Important figures come alive in Chips' pages: King Edward VIII, Wallis Warfield Simpson, Neville Chamberlain, Churchill, Rab Butler, Eden, Hore-Belisha, Duff and Diana Cooper, Prince Paul of Yugoslavia, Field-Marshal Wavell, Somerset Maugham and a smorgasbord of kings, princes, dukes, earls, tycoons, generals, artists and writers. Chips knew everyone who was anyone and wasn't reluctant to “dish the dirt.” His keen insights into people were only offset by his shameless snobbery.
I must point out, while the diaries are good reading, they expose the unpalatable affinity of Chips' circle for Franco and German Nazism. The British upper classes dreaded Leftism and practiced a casual antisemitism that is jarring to modern readers. Chips, in fact, never referred to the political opposition as Labour, but always as “the Socialists.” In 1936, he and his wife, an heiress to the Guinness fortune, were wined and dined in Germany by Göring and Goebbels (Göring's fête in Berlin is a standout scene in the diaries). In London, Joachim von Ribbentrop was a frequent guest at the Channon townhouse on Belgrave Square. Chips was so steeped in conservative conformity that, for a politician, he was surprisingly tone deaf to popular opinions of his time. Although he attributed his failure to rise to higher office to personal animosities and his individual shortcomings, in fact he was too closely associated with Neville Chamberlain and the policy of appeasement to find a prominent place in government after 1940.
The historian A. J. P. Taylor dubbed ”Chips”: The Diaries of Sir Henry Channon a “classic,” while Nancy Mitford said “You can't think how vile & spiteful & silly it is.” Both descriptions are apt. It's worth reading and earned Five Stars from me.
Note: These diaries are expurgated and incomplete. Chips' son, Paul, and historian Robert Rhodes James edited this version for publication in 1967. Additional books were discovered later. In accordance with Paul's will, the full unexpurgated diaries are restricted until 2018.