Author:Fred Dibnah,David Hall
Join engineer, steeplejack and beloved storyteller Fred Dibnah, as he takes you on a personal tour through industrial Britain.
Bringing to life landmark events from the eighteenth to the early twentieth century in his typically engaging and anecdotal style, Fred introduces the great inventors from the age of steam, describes the day-to-day operation of railways, mills, forges and factories, and paints a vivid picture of what life was like for the mill-hands, colliers and engineers who laboured in industrial Britain - the workshop of the world.
With a comprehensive gazetteer, which lists details of over 230 places of industrial interest - from steam railways and ships, to windmills and watermills - Foundries and Rolling Mills is a glorious portrait of Britain at the height of its industrial power, from one of our most revered figures.
In illuminating her own, Light serves up the most powerful family history I have ever read.
—— Penelope Lively , New York TimesLight writes beautifully. With such colour and with perception and lyricism she clads the past....Common People is part memoir, part thrilling social history of the England of the Industrial Revolution, but above all a work of quiet poetry and insight into human behaviour. It is full of wisdom.
—— Melanie Reid , The Times Book of the WeekThis book is a substantial achievement: its combination of scholarship and intelligence is, you may well think, the best monument you could have to all those she has rescued from time's oblivion.
—— Financial TimesEvocatively written...a thrilling and unnerving read
—— The ObserverExquisite...Barely a page goes by without something fascinating on it, betraying Light's skill in winkling out the most relevant or moving aspects of her antecedents' lives, which echo through the generations.
—— the Independent on Sunday[A] short and beautifully written meditation on family and mobility.
—— the IndependentIntellectually sound and relevant...a refreshingly modern way of thinking about our past.
—— New StatesmanLight [is skilled] in probing dark corners of her ancestry and exposing their historical meaning...packed with humanity.
—— Sunday TimesBeautifully written and exhaustively researched, Alison Light makes her family speak for England.
—— Jerry White, author of London in the Eighteenth CenturyA remarkable achievement...should become a classic.
—— Margaret DrabbleImmersive, engrossing
—— Laura Miller , SlateWritten with such passion . . . will fascinate and inform anyone who is interested in Victorian ways of life
—— Dr Ian Mortimer, author of 'The Time Traveller’s Guide to Medieval England' on 'How to Be a Victorian'If we ever have a female Doctor Who, I shall forward Ruth Goodman's name for consideration, not least because the historian has already done so much time travelling
—— The TimesWonderful, informative, startling . . . Goodman's unique selling proposition as a historian is that she walks the walk of her time period, even when that walk involves hard labor in a corset and a hoop skirt
—— New York Times (on 'How to be a Victorian')Meticulously researched
—— Big Issue in the NorthA ground-breaking book, richly nuanced with titbits of information, insight and understanding
—— Daily Mail (on 'Singled Out')Remarkably perceptive and well-researched . . . Virginia Nicholson has produced another extraordinarily interesting work, sensitive, intelligent and well-written
—— Sunday Telegraph (on 'Singled Out')An inspiring book, lovingly researched, well-written and humane . . . the period is beautifully caught
—— Economist (on 'Singled Out')The popular image is of a world where women wore little frilled pinafores with immaculately coiffed hair and happy smiles as they dusted, swept and baked . . . But Nicholson's book reveals a much darker side of life
—— Telegraph, Best Non-Fiction Books of 2015Gripping, constantly surprising: a page-turner. We hear at first hand the life stories of women from different walks of life, from factory workers to debs. Each story draws you right in and it's always a wrench to move on
—— Country LifeA sparkling and fascinating account
—— David E. HoffmanWell-paced narrative...of great relevance today, when such conflicts seem (but only seem) to have disappeared.
—— Richard Pevear and Larissa VolokhonskyImmensely compelling
—— Fred Hiatt , The Pat BankerMeticulously researched
—— Duncan White , Irish IndependentThe true strength of this meticulously researched book is the placing of the revelations into the context of a compelling human drama
—— Weekly TelegraphEngrossing
—— Andrew Lynch , Sunday Business Post[An] outstanding treasure of literature
—— Market OracleImpeccably researched, and moving, this book breaks new ground
—— 5 stars , Sunday Telegraph