Author:Stuart Maconie
Factory, mine and mill. Industry, toil and grime. Its manufacturing roots mean we still see the North of England as a hardworking place. But, more than possibly anywhere else, the North has always known how to get dressed up, take itself out on the town and have a good time. After all, working and playing hard is its specialty, and Stuart Maconie is in search of what, exactly, this entails what it tells us about the North today.
Following tip offs and rumour, Stuart takes trip to forgotten corners and locals’ haunts. From the tapas bars of Halifax to the caravan parks of Berwick Upon Tweed, from a Westhoughton bowling green to Manchester’s curry mile, via dog tracks and art galleries, dance floors and high fells, Stuart compares the new and old North, with some surprising results.
The Pie at Night could be seen as a companion to the bestselling Pies and Prejudice, but it is not a sequel. After all, this is a new decade and the North is changing faster than ever. This is a revealing and digressive journey and a State of the North address, delivered from barstool, terrace, dress circle and hillside.
Maconie's enjoyment ... is obvious, and he makes it just as enjoyable for his readers
—— Daily MailMaconie's engaging, conversational prose is full of telling detail, jokes and deft quotation ... [he has a] rare ability to convey the sense of people having a really good time'
—— TelegraphHis engaging, conversational prose is full of telling detail, terrific jokes and unfailingly deft quotation
—— Daily TelegraphHistory and politics are lightly woven through this account of a changing society, told with Maconie's typical gusto
—— New StatesmanMaconie's latest love letter to the North of England...is infectious, enlivened by terrific jokes
—— Radar Magazine, Sunday TelegraphA most impressive work of philosophical history
—— Robert SkidelskyCruickshank’s history laments the City’s encroachment on Spitalfields and the attendant growth there of estate agents, internet companies, fashion outlets and beardy hipster capitalists bent on having their slice of East End exotica.
—— Best Books About London , Evening StandardA delight to read . . . Teaches one how to use one's eyes more intelligently.
—— Jean Seaton, Chair of Judges, PEN Hessell-Tiltman History PrizeParticularly interesting is the story of Elder Street viewed through architectural sources, taxes and censuses. It acts as a microcosm showing the changes Britain faced over the centuries.
—— Who Do You Think You Are? MagazineThis is an elegy to a place changing beyond recognition . . . Cruickshank is an appealing, sympathetic writer.
—— The TimesFor history lovers, this is an excellent read . . . Cruickshank's meticulous research is breathtaking.
—— Historical Novel Society[Spitalfields'] raffish vitality is derived from the area's long history of embracing immigrants . . . Cruickshank warns that the greatest threat to Spitalfields comes from the ever-encroaching march of tower blocks.
—— Must Reads , Daily MailFrench Protestants in the 17th century, Irish journeymen in the 18th, Russian Jews in the 19th, Bengalis in the 20th and international hipsters in the 21st have settled in Spitalfields, an area either side of London's Commercial Street that must be, square metre for square metre, among the most migrated-to places in the world. It is so dense with stories that Dan Cruickshank's 750-page history of this 'handful of streets', published last year, feels too short.
—— Janan Ganesh , Financial TimesRoper…has an extraordinary talent for making complex theological issues not just clear but entertaining.
—— Gerrard DeGroot , The TimesBeautifully written… Among the most interesting, provocative and original biographies of Luther to appear in recent years… This unfailingly inventive and compelling account is a welcome gust of fresh air… Anyone seriously interested in one of the most influential figures of the last half-millennium will need to make time to read this one.
—— Peter Marshall , Literary Review[It is] fresh and captivating… A closely focused and compellingly intimate study of Luther’s perceptions.
—— Alexandra Shephard , History Today, Book of the Year[A] rewarding biography… Roper brings him alive as a very human figure.
—— Dominic Sandbrook , Sunday Times, Book of the YearThis is the book about Luther we’ve missed among all the holy books and the case studies: the whole engrossing story of a soul and a mind and the man who broke the old world and its old ways for ever. Lyndal Roper brings alive the struggle for ideas, adds a subtle sense of how human beings work, and distils a lifetime of scholarship to conjure Luther’s own world with its princes, demons, scandals and sheer brave defiance of a whole old order
—— Michael Pye, author of The Edge of the WorldCompelling and above all deeply honest biography.
—— David Crane , SpectatorThis book will continue to bring the reformer and his theology to life for generations to come.
—— Bridget Heal , History Today, Book of the Year[An] excellent study.
—— Jonathan Wright , BBC History Magazine*****
—— Christopher Howse , Sunday TelegraphRoper’s Luther is an angry man: a renegade and a rebel… [She] paints a vivid picture of the political and economic context in Mansfeld, where Luther grew up, and of the situation of Wittenberg and its political governance. There are important findings here, particularly relating to Luther’s early life
—— Charlotte Methuen , The Times Literary SupplementRoper writes with the virtuosity of an unsurpassed archival researcher, the grace of an elegant stylist, and the compassion of a seasoned student of human nature. Her nuanced and insightful portrait brilliantly evokes the inner and outer worlds of the man Luther. The book is a complete triumph.
—— Joel F. Harrington, author of The Faithful ExecutionerMagnificent and surely definitive – a work of immense scholarship, acute psychological insight and gloriously fluent prose. Lyndal Roper has got under the skin of her subject and the result is thrilling.
—— Jessie Childs, author of Henry VIII’s Last Victim and God’s TraitorsRoper’s scholarly strengths plus 10 years of careful research have yielded a richly contextualised biography of a man whose influence has been and remains enormous, for good or ill or both.
—— Brad Gregory , TabletThis is a helpful and insightful examination of Luther’s attitudes and relationships… Highly recommended.
—— Martin Wellings , Methodist RecorderRoper portrays a deeply flawed but fascinating human being to rival any of the major personalities of Tudor England.
—— Caroline Sanderson , BooksellerI heartily commend Martin Luther… It is simply the best English-language biography of Luther I’ve read and I’d be amazed if its combination of rigorous scholarship and approachable tone is bettered.
—— Francis Philips , Catholic Herald, Book of the Year[A] superb new biography… A challenging and deeply stimulating study of a major historical figure.
—— Elaine Fulton , History TodayThe work of a brilliant scholar, who had devoted years of research to the project, and it repays careful reading… There are rich treasures in the book, without a bout. Roper has a great gift for narrative… Roper’s exploration of the cultural and social world of the Saxon miners is masterly… Fascinating.
—— Euan Cameron , Church TimesA probing psychological account.
—— Very Rev. Professor Iain Torrence , Herald Scotland