Author:Jerry White
Jerry White's London in the Eighteenth Century is an unrivalled, panoramic account of the city's dramatic century of rebirth by its leading expert.
London in the eighteenth century had risen from the ashes. The city and its people had been brought to the brink by the Great Fire of 1666. But the century that followed was a period of vigorous expansion, of scientific and artistic genius, of blossoming reason, civility, elegance and manners. It was also an age of extremes: of starving poverty and exquisite fashion, of joy and despair, of sentiment and cruelty.
In Jerry White’s acclaimed history of London’s magnificent and boisterous rebirth we witness the astonishing drama of daily life in the midst of this burgeoning city.
White is one of our great chroniclers of London and this beautifully written, impeccably researched and incredibly generous book is a necessity for those of us who are not yet tired of life
—— Frances Wilson , Telegraph[A] page-turner biography of the capital, full of amazing facts and anecdotes, a book that anyone wanting food for thought about social history or human nature will treasure
—— Evening StandardAn invigorating yet thoughtful tour through the metropolis’s most extraordinary and bracing of centuries
—— Andrew Holgate , Sunday TimesA tremendous work - well researched, well written, solid and reliable, mastering a complex subject in an authoritative account that is a pleasure to read
—— Dan Cruikshank , Country LifeA dazzling account
—— Daily ExpressSpiralling stories enliven every page of Jerry White’s magnificent, fully annotated, accessible and scholarly book
—— TabletIt’s hard to see how a more detailed and readable account of Defoe’s ‘great and monstrous thing’ could be written
—— Time OutA vast and impressive synthesis ... [a] wonderful panorama
—— GuardianMagnificent
—— Sunday TelegraphMagisterial
—— Daily MailAt the heart of this books lies a fascinating debate about poets and society
—— Craig Brown , Mail on SundayA powerful and very talented writer…dashing and arresting…the greatness in his subject shines through every dark corner
—— Peter Craven , Sydney Review of BooksSwift admits that he cannot pin his elusive subject down, but there is no need. By following his instinct he has allowed the poet, with his ‘shifting self-narration’, to lead the way in this marvellous evocation.
—— Philippa Williams , The LadyAmerican poet Ezra Pound… proves an elusive but fascinating subject in this non-linear, impressionistic biography
—— Juanita Coulson , LadyIsaiah Berlin is considered one of the letter-writers of the 20th century... those who give into temptation to flick through will be infinitely rewarded
—— Oxford TimesSparkles with brilliance and generosity
—— Jon M. Sweeney , The TabletMeticulously edited and footnoted.
—— Robert Fulford , National PostSo readable... wonderfully vivid portraits of Powell's famous acquaintances
—— The Mail on Sunday Books of the YearRichly and movingly enjoyable... a tapestry of Powell's contemporaries
—— The TimesPublisher's description. A biography of the comic writer Anthony Powell, author of the million-word masterpiece A Dance to the Music of Time, from renowned British biographer Hilary Spurling. An insightful and surprising look into what drove the writer widely regarded as the English Proust.
—— PenguinElkin is a beguiling writer, and resolutely female, her sentences doing what Virginia Woolf wanted women's sentences to do, which is to "hold back the male flood"… Flâneuse is a riposte to all that macho stomping about… Flâneuse is so rich with shining trinkets and wise thoughts that not a single page disappoints or bores. It's that rare thing these days - a work of feminism which is enthused by literature and art and ideas rather than pop culture.
—— Ellis O'Hanlon , Irish IndependentElkin explores the history of people and places in astonishing detail. She writes with a passion and personality that creates the kind of familiarity which encourages us to believe that the women she studies were close friends of hers… Elkin's first person, colloquial yet witty style lets you into the recesses of her imagination and invites you to be her travel companion
—— Oxford StudentLauren Elkin is one of our most valuable critical thinkers – the Susan Sontag of her generation
—— Deborah LevyThe acclaimed historian of Russia sweeps the brittle high society of pre-Revolutionary St Petersburg, the terror-chilled jails of Stalin's purges and the secrets of 1990s Moscow archives into a tragic panorama.'
—— INDEPENDENT, TEN OF THE HOTTEST BOOKS THIS SUMMERA seamlessly written and moving portrait of the soviet Union in miniature from the Revolution to the age of Yeltsin.
—— MAIL ON SUNDAYWhat is striking is how he has thrown himself heart and soul into the romance and emotion of his drama. The novel throbs with sex, maternal feeling, revolutionary fervour and terror ... Terrific stuff
—— SUNDAY TIMES