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William Kent
William Kent
Oct 9, 2024 12:22 PM

Author:Timothy Mowl

William Kent

William Kent (1685-1748) was great without a hint of gravitas, a con man who became one of the artistic geniuses of his age. He was a high camp Yorkshire bachelor, brought back by Lord Burlington from an artistic apprenticeship in Rome where he had painted for a cardinal and won prizes from a pope. In London he charmed the surly old Hanoverian King George I, redecorated Kensington Palace for him with a clumsy bravura, and survived the subsequent critical storm - just. England was in stylistic chaos after rejecting its lawful Stuart rulers and Burlington was imposing a chaste and dreary Palladianism on a philistine island people. Kent saw his chance and never looked back.

Queen Caroline, the real ruler, used him to project in sensational garden buildings by the Thames at Richmond her vision of a new scientific Britain. Sir Robert Walpole paid him to turn Houghton Hall in Norfolk into an imperial palace, outshining anything the German monarchs could raise. Another prime minister, the virtuous Henry Pelham, built with Kent a revolutionary suburban bolt-hole in Surrey. Between them they invented the Gothic Revival out at Esher, but have never been given the credit.

Late in life, while raising an alabaster temple to Jupiter at Holkham Hall, also in Norfolk, and the sexiest interiors in London on Berkeley Square, Kent was discovering his true genius, laying out casually at Esher, Stowe in Buckinghamshire and Rousham near Oxford, the Arcadian image of the 'English Garden' that would take the continent, even France, by storm as England's only original contribution to European culture.

Reviews

Entertaining, provocative and stimulating... opens one's eyes afresh to Kent's all-round genius.

—— Spectator

[Mowl's] accounts of actual buildings and gardens are full of subjective intensity as well as subtle observations... Engrossing.

—— Guardian

Mowl has energy and cunning in spades, and he wisely takes the course of making the book more of an assessment of Kent's work and times than an attempt on his life... a glittering knockabout of a book.

—— Independent on Sunday

Provocative... We tend to admire what received opinion admires, whereas Mowl's book reverses the process, and healthily advises us to 'draw back from praising past culture simply because it happened.'

—— Sunday Times

Engaging... I was reminded, above all, of Sacheverell Sitwell's evocations of the Baroque. Kent is as much a work of stylistic art. Mowl has a gift for putting his hero's concepts into prose.

—— Literary Review

Entertaining... Mowl [has] an impressive grasp of politics and patronage, and he writes about architecture, interior decoration and garden design with both authority and liveliness.

—— Daily Telegraph

There is much to admire in Timothy Mowl's fearless approach.

—— Times Literary Supplement

Although Kent is an influential figure, he left little in writing but Mowl does a fine job of recreating his life, and personality... An honest account of Kent's genius and failings.

—— BBC History Magazine

Like so many of Spain's deep rifts, the enmity stems from the civil war. Barcelona represent the losers, democrats, Catalonia. Real Madrid represent the victors, repressors, Spain. Lowe's detailed study shows that the caricature is simplistic but not entirely incorrect

—— Nick Pitt , The Sunday Times

A work of profound research and stimulating discoveries… Lowe has done El Clasico a service by defining its history

—— Hugh MacDonald , Herald

Lowe's impressive list of interviewees includes Alfredi di Stéfano, Johan Cruyff, Luis Figo, Zinedine Zidane and Andrés Iniesta. …There are also neat mentions of Barça's (unwitting) role in the murder of Leon Trotsky, as well as Madrid’s links to the Beatles in the 1960s and Pedro Almodovar in the 1980s

—— Dermot Corrigan , When Saturday Comes

Far more than simply Messi vs Ronaldo, the rivalry between two of the most colossal teams in football, as unfolded in this excellent history, pitches Catalonia against Spain, Franco against the republic, north versus south, and so much more

—— Latest 7

A truly outstanding account of an intense football rivalry which exists between Barcelona and Real Madrid

—— Oldham Evening Chronicle

An extremely well-informed and usefully myth-busting portrait of the long rivalry between Barcelona and Real Madrid

—— Richard Williams , Guardian Online

Fascinating... This one ought not to be missed

—— FTB Pro

Much more than the story of two men or two teams or even a game. Barcelona v Real Madrid is one of the greatest rivalries in modern football and this is its forensic history

—— RTE Guide

Turns much of the accepted wisdom about the rivalry on its head

—— Robert O'Shea , Evening Echo

A well-informed, myth-busting history of modern Spain told through one of the world’s most intense football rivalries

—— Observer

Rich, engrossing book

—— Michael Walker , Irish Times

A compelling rivalry... From the pig's head thrown at Luís Figo after his switch to Real to the epic matches between Pep Guardiola and José Mourinho, Lowe covers it all

—— The Times

Surprising . . . interesting. . . [Elizabeth Russell] was certainly a rich, famous, extraordinary, cosmopolitan and ambitious woman who by turns fascinated and exasperated the men around her . . . Laoutaris has discovered a lot of fascinating details . . . Elizabeth deserves the years of research . . . Laoutaris has given her; she can now join the gallery of neglected women resurrected by feminist scholarship.

—— Professor Gary Taylor , The Washington Post

Lady Elizabeth Russell is the star of Shakespeare and the Countess . . . Historian and biographer Chris Laoutaris tells the story of Russell's life, her epic legal battles and her capricious, violent world with sympathy, scholarship and vivid description. He has done extensive original research to piece together new insights and map the complex connections of Elizabethan society. Shakespeare's story is a central incident . . . strengthened and illuminated by the broad and deep context Laoutaris has built up.

—— Shelf Awareness, USA

No, we have no idea why the formidable historical figure Lady Elizabeth Russell hasn't been the star of a play or movie yet . . . She's a compelling villain/heroine. Infuriated that a new theatre was opening right next to her home, Lady Elizabeth (who styled herself the Dowager Countess) mounted a furious assault against Shakespeare's new home, driven by religious passion . . . and, let's face it, good old not-in-my-backyard-ism . . . This showdown is presented with verve by historian Chris Laoutaris and virtually every critic has commented that it's a tale worthy of Shakespeare's gifts

—— ‘Bookfilter’s Best of Summer Picks’, Broadway Direct

The season's big mainstream Shakespeare book . . . Elizabeth Russell is a terrific subject for a biography, and Laoutaris is a hugely energetic narrator who brings every detail of his story to life . . . and it's all so entertaining . . . The whole thing is carried off with storytelling aplomb and deep, sometimes ground breaking research.

—— Open Letters Monthly, USA

Always engaging and informative. Readers will get a bird's eye view of court life, religious infighting, political scheming, competing spies and international intrigue at the turn of the 17th century. Laoutaris is an indefatigable researcher and a fine prose stylist.

—— Providence Journal, USA

Hoss’s life is grimly fascinating … Hanns and Rudolf is written with a suppressed fury at the moral emptiness of men like him

—— The Times

Perhaps one of the finest books on the Holocaust and the Second World War that I have read in a long time.

—— Adam Cannon , The Jewish Telegraph

[A] gripping and superbly written book

—— Mail on Sunday
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