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Books : History : Cultural History

  • The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher: or the Murder at Road Hill House: Or the Murder at Road Hill House

    Kate Summerscale

    The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher: or the Murder at Road Hill House: Or the Murder at Road Hill House
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  • A History of Modern Britain

    Andrew Marr

    A History of Modern Britain
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  • Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire

    Amanda Foreman

    Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire
    Georgiana Spencer was, in a sense, an 18th-century "It Girl". She came from one of England's richest and most landed families, and married into another. She was, beautiful, sensitive and extravagant. Acquainted fairly young with Charles James Fox, her move from parties to Parties led her to become the intimate of ministers and princes, and she canvassed assiduously for the Whig cause, most famously in the Westminster election of 1784. By turns she was caricatured and fawned on by the press, and she provided the inspiration for Lady Teazle in Sheridan's School For Scandal. But, luckily for her biographer, she also had weaknesses that were to taint her life. As gin gripped the masses, so gambling enthralled the aristocracy. By 1784 Georgiana owed "many, many, many thousands", and the creditors she acquired dogged her until her death, but the sterility of her marriage meant that she never came close to disclosing the magnitude of her debts. Amanda Foreman describes astutely the mess that was personal relationships for the aristocratic subculture (Georgiana and the Duke engaged for many years in a ménage à trois with Lady Elizabeth Fraser, who inveigled her way into his bed and her heart). She is, by her own admission, a little in love with her subject, which can lead to occasional lapses of perspective, but generally it adds zest to a narrative built on, rather than burdened by, scholarship, that is at once accessible and learned. An impressive debut, in every sense. --David Vincent
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  • The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the World

    Niall Ferguson

    The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the World
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  • Wall and Piece

    "Banksy"

    Wall and Piece
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  • Tommy's War: A First World War Diary 1913-1918

    Thomas Cairns Livingstone

    Tommy's War: A First World War Diary 1913-1918
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  • Dry Store Room No. 1: The Secret Life of the Natural History Museum

    Richard Fortey

    Dry Store Room No. 1: The Secret Life of the Natural History Museum
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  • Seven Days in the Art World

    Sarah Thornton

    Seven Days in the Art World
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  • Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography (Vintage classics)

    Roland Barthes

    Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography (Vintage classics)
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  • Stranger in the House: Women's Stories of Men Returning from the Second World War

    Julie Summers

    Stranger in the House: Women's Stories of Men Returning from the Second World War
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  • I Never Knew That About London

    Christopher Winn

    I Never Knew That About London
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  • London: The Biography

    Peter Ackroyd

    London: The Biography
    When the eminent novelist and biographer Peter Ackroyd finished writing London: The Biography, he almost immediately had a heart attack, such was the effort of his 800-page work about the "human body" that is this most fascinating of cities. And not just any human body either, but "envisaged in the form of a young man with his arms outstretched in a gesture of liberation... it embodies the energy and exaltation of a city continually beating in great waves of progress and of confidence."

    Probably there is no one better placed than Ackroyd--the author of mammoth lives of Dickens and Blake, and novels such as Hawksmoor and Dan Leno and the Lime House Golem which set singular characters against the backdrop of a city constantly shifting in time--to write such a rich, sinewy account of "Infinite London".

    Ackroyd's London is no mere chronology. Its chapters take on such varied themes as drinking, sex, childhood, poverty, crime and punishment, sewage, food, pestilence and fire, immigration, maps, theatre and war. We learn that gin was "the demon of London for half a century", and that "it has been estimated that in the 1740s and 1750s there were 17,000 'gin-houses'." Fleet Street was an area known for its "violent delights" where "a 14-year-old boy, only 18 inches high, was to be seen in 1702 at a grocer's shop called the Eagle and Child by Shoe Lane." By the mid 19th century "London had become known as the greatest city on earth." By 1939 "one in five of the British population had become a Londoner."

    Though London's chapters vary meaning that it can be dipped into at random, Ackroyd is employing a skilful and continuous theme throughout, which constantly links past and present--the similarities of children's games in Lambeth in 1910 and 1999; the obsession with time--"in 21st-century London time rushes forward and is everywhere apparent", while in 18th-century London the church clock of Newgate "regulated the times of hanging." Above all, he insists that the "dark secret life" of the metropolis is as relevant today as it was in perhaps its most appropriate period, Victorian London.

    Again and again Ackroyd returns to the image of London as a living organism, hence his use of the word "biography" in the title. At once awed by and intimate with this "ubiquitous" city, he stresses that "it can be located nowhere in particular... its circumference is everywhere." --Catherine Taylor

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  • McMafia: Crime without Frontiers: Crime Without Frontiers

    Misha Glenny

    McMafia: Crime without Frontiers: Crime Without Frontiers
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  • I Never Knew That About England

    Christopher Winn

    I Never Knew That About England
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  • Shadows Of The Workhouse: The Drama Of Life In Postwar London: The Drama of Life in Postwar London

    Jennifer Worth

    Shadows Of The Workhouse: The Drama Of Life In Postwar London: The Drama of Life in Postwar London
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  • Mother Tongue: The English Language

    Bill Bryson

    Mother Tongue: The English Language
    Who would have thought that a book about the English language would be so entertaining? Certainly not this grammar-allergic reviewer, but The Mother Tongue pulls it off admirably. Bill Bryson--a zealot--is the right man for the job. Who else could rhapsodise about "the colourless murmur of the schwa" with a straight face? It is his unflagging enthusiasm, seeping from between every sentence, that carries the book.

    Bryson displays an encyclopedic knowledge of his topic, and this inevitably encourages a light tone; the more you know about a subject, the more absurd it becomes. No jokes are necessary, the facts do well enough by themselves, and Bryson supplies tens per page. As well as tossing off gems of fractured English (from a Japanese eraser: "This product will self- destruct in Mother Earth."), Bryson frequently takes time to compare the idiosyncratic tongue with other languages. Not only does this give a laugh (one word: Welsh), and always shed considerable light, it also makes the reader feel fortunate to speak English.

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  • London Lore: The Legends and Traditions of the World's Most Vibrant City

    Steve Roud

    London Lore: The Legends and Traditions of the World's Most Vibrant City
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  • Photography: A Critical Introduction

    Photography: A Critical Introduction
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  • Orientalism: Western Conceptions of the Orient (Penguin Modern Classics)

    Edward W. Said

    Orientalism: Western Conceptions of the Orient (Penguin Modern Classics)
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  • Black Diamonds: The Rise and Fall of an English Dynasty

    Catherine Bailey

    Black Diamonds: The Rise and Fall of an English Dynasty
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