From the Publisher:

Do leaders make history or does history make leaders? A deep dive into how we define, seek, and become leaders.

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We live in a period of leadership in crisis. At home, and across the globe, we sense that unqualified and irresponsible individuals are being elevated to positions of power, strong men and autocrats are consolidating their hold on governance, and the people are losing faith in the prospect of a better future. How have we arrived at this point? And how can we correct our course?

For the past decade, Moshik Temkin has challenged his students at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, and around the world, to grapple with the nature of leadership as part of his wildly popular course “Leaders and Leadership in History.” Now, in Warriors, Rebels, and Saints, Temkin refashions the classroom for a wider audience.

Although a deep dive into the topic, this book is far from a celebration of leaders and leadership. After all, learning from leadership is not just about success—we can learn just as much, and sometimes more, from failure. What Temkin does is put forth a critical and even skeptical view of leadership. Taking readers through the trials and tribulations of historic leaders—from King David to the nineteenth-century suffragists, from Franklin Roosevelt to the French Resistance, from Malcolm X to Margaret Thatcher, from Mahatma Gandhi to Fela Kuti—the book highlights how we define, seek, and become leaders.

Using art, film, and literature to illustrate the drama of the past, Temkin considers how leaders have made decisions in the most difficult circumstances—from the Great Depression of the 1930s to the dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo and from the anticolonial wars of the 20th century to the civil rights struggle—and how, in a world desperate for good leadership, we can evaluate those decisions and draw lessons for today.  

Praise for Warriors, Rebels, and Saints:

“Moshik Temkin brings together deep historical knowledge, cultural comparison, and sophisticated analysis of what makes leadership and how individual leaders both reflect their society and shape it in turn. This is a book both empathetic and gripping on a subject of huge importance in our turbulent times”

— Rana Mitter, author of Forgotten Ally: China’s World War II, 1937-45

“In this gem of a book, the accomplished historian and teacher Moshik Temkin performs the crucial task of placing the art of leadership in its historical context. The result is a book chockfull of insights, showing how a careful and unsparing study of past leaders—those who had great power and those who didn’t—can help us identify the attributes we need to see in their successors today.”

— Fredrik Logevall, Laurence D. Belfer Professor of International Affairs, Harvard University

“An engrossing read… Fascinating”

The Telegraph (India)

“Ranging across the centuries and around the globe, Moshik Temkin engages questions about leadership that could not be more timely.  In exploring how history both produces and constrains leaders, he offers a thoroughly engaging meditation on a compelling array of individuals who shaped the  eras in which they lived. The result is a fascinating, illuminating and cautionary meditation on leadership.”

— Ellen Fitzpatrick, author of The Highest Glass Ceiling: Women’s Quest for the American Presidency

“A plea for the importance of history in the study of leadership.”

Kirkus Reviews

“Very readable and thought-provoking”

The Irish Times

“This book is that rare thing among 'leadership' titles: a truly original concept. ... An incredibly well-researched and lively read.”

The Financial Times

“A poetic book on prosaic leadership… Highly recommended”

Business Standard