Sir Alec Guinness was one of the greatest actors of the 20th century. With a talent recognised by discerning critics from his very first appearance on the stage, he gained a world-wide reputation playing roles on the screen such as Fagin in 'Oliver Twist' and 'The Man In The White Suit'. His performance as Colonel Nicholson in 'Bridge On The River Kwai' won him an Oscar and in his later years he captivated a new generation of admirers as George Smiley in 'Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy' and Ben Kenobi in 'Star Wars'.
Guinness was a man who vigorously guarded his privacy and he remained an enigma to the general public and a mystery even to his family and closest friends. After his death in August, 2000, his widow Merula asked the author Piers Paul Read, who had been a friend of her husband, to write his biography. Given full co-operation by the Guinness family and free access to Sir Alec's papers and diaries, Read has written a penetrating and perceptive account of an intriguing and complex man.