British Heroes is a defiant celebration of the men who built, defended, and defined Britain — from the battlefields of Alfred the Great to the political trenches of Tommy Robinson. These pages do not apologise. They do not balance. They do not revise. This is a hagiography — proudly and deliberately so.
In an age where British pride is treated as suspect, where schools apologise for the Empire, and where national heroes are torn down — literally and figuratively — this book stands against the tide. It honours Britain’s sons — warriors, poets, prophets, rebels, rulers — not with disclaimers, but with reverence.
From Churchill to Enoch Powell, T.E. Lawrence to Wilberforce, Shakespeare to Farage — and even unsung patriots like Arthur Zarfas — British Heroes offers an A to Z of courage, conviction, and cultural memory. Each figure is presented not as a problem to be dissected, but as a man to be remembered.
This is a book for those tired of national self-loathing. For those who still believe in duty, tradition, sacrifice, and sovereignty. For those ready to raise their heads again.