Selected Product: | London in the Nineteenth Century: A Human Awful Wonder of God Paperback Author: Jerry White Publisher: Vintage Release Date: January 2008 ISBN-10: 0712600302 ISBN-13: 9780712600309 List Price: £10.99 Average Customer Rating: | | London in the Twentieth Century: A City and Its People ISBN-10: 1845951263 Austerity Britain, 1945-1951 (Tales of a New Jerusalem) ISBN-10: 0747599238 St Pancras Station (Wonders of the World) ISBN-10: 1861979517 London: A Life in Maps ISBN-10: 0712349189 The Blackest Streets: The Life and Death of a Victorian Slum ISBN-10: 0224071750 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for London in the Nineteenth Century: A Human Awful Wonder of God by Jerry White (ISBN-10: 0712600302, ISBN-13: 9780712600309). At this time we have not yet written a review for London in the Nineteenth Century: A Human Awful Wonder of God by Jerry White (ISBN-10: 0712600302, ISBN-13: 9780712600309). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com A good and interesting read | Customer Rating: | | This book sparked my interest in London's history generally because you can clearly relate the happenings and statistics in this book to our present times and recent past. A thoroughly enjoyable read, and I'm looking forward to reading his 20th century history of London. | Fascinating - History made real | Customer Rating: | | This book is both informative and entertaining. What I find particularly fascinating are the various similarities to own period. Problems such as overcrowding, street crime - even the fact that statistically at least, crime figures fell during the course of the century, but people "felt" surrounded by it - seems to be remarkably familiar. I for one have to confess to a much more "cosy" image of the Victorian period (probably fuelled by too many middle-class novels and an "Upstairs Downstairs"-type of preconception. So it was most educational to be told how things really were. | simply great | Customer Rating: | | A magical trip thru 19th.century London,it does not falter in its quest to paint a picture with words----an ex-London Cabbie. | As thorough as a text book - as entertaining as a novel | Customer Rating: | | The breadth of this book would be astonishing enough if it wasn't also for it's coherent structure and - most importantly - lively writing. Mr White knows his subject, but he doesn't lose his thread beneath a mountain of statistics or (Peter Ackroyd take note) lose himself in flights of fancy. He brilliantly portrays, above all, the human drama which makes this such an exciting - and unique - period of history. | An astounding history: a pleasure to read. | Customer Rating: | What a book! I don't read much history, so I was not thrilled when a friend gave me London in the Nineteenth Century as a present. I confess I had never heard of Jerry White. I dipped into it for form's sake one Friday evening, and ended up locking myself away for the rest of the weekend until I had read all 600-odd pages. Generally, reading history feels like work: not in this case. It is written with an obvious passion for its subject, and crammed with nuggets you want to read aloud to someone. It's completely free of the pompousness I associate with academic historians, and I developed a real liking for the author. He doesn't impose his intellect and learning on you, but shares it with you, so that you can't help catching his enthusiasm. It seems fluent and effortless, despite the compendious knowledge and research that went into it. The sources (all meticulously referenced) are innumerable - it's when you dip into the index and footnotes that you really begin to realise what a feat of learning this is. I can't begin to pick out favourite bits: there are too many. But where I really got hooked was in the second part, "People". At that point, it came fully alive for me. The book has a democratic feel, because so much of the material relates to the common people. Throughout the remaining chapters on "Work", "Culture" (with a fascinating study of shared and private pleasures), and "Law and Order", it read as easily and engagingly as a novel.
As soon as I finished this I had to find myself a copy of the same author's "London in the Twentieth Century" - which, scandalously, is out of print! I eventually tracked it down on the internet, and found to my delight it is every bit as good. I can only hope he will tackle another century or two. |
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