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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A solid survey of Edwardian England from 1901 to the beginning of World War I,
By C. M Mills "Michael Mills" (Knoxville Tennessee) - See all my reviews (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
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This review is from: The Edwardians (Hardcover)
King Edward VII ruled Great Britain from the death of hismother the venerable Queen Victoria. In the years of his brief monarchy from 1901-1910 the British Isles became a modern, industrial nation. The Edwardians are often portrayed as the gentle gentlemen and ladies who lived quiet lives of splendor and wealth prior to the Great War of August,1914 that bled European dry of its young man- hood. Not so! The age was noted for rapid advances in: technology-Hattersly tells us of the developments in flight, automobiles and shipping An age of revolution for women suffragetes and common persons demanding the vote. Public education was extended during this period. England was 77% urban with a high rate of literary as compared with the previous Victorian age. The English novel flourished with such authors as Henry James, D.H. Lawrence, Joseph Conrad and E.M. Forster penning classics. Poetry was in flower as witness the work of William Butler Yeats while the theatre of ideas was the realm of George Bernard Shaw. English music was most noted in the works of the muse of the empire Sir Edward Elgar. Politics in the House of Common saw such stars emerge as the young Winston Churchill. Notable politicians included Prime Minister Balfour and David Lloyd-George. The Labour Party grew in power and influence during the age. British expeditions resulted in Scott's failed try to reach the South Pole and the exploits of South Pole explorer Sir Shackleton. Professional sports became voguish as cricket, rugby football and the 1908 London Olympics were featured. Boxing and Horse Racing were very popular with all levels of society showing a keen interest. Journalism catered to the grew literacy rate and the British Empire dealt with such issues as Irish Home Rule the Boer War and the rulership of India and other distant lands. Hattersly book does have errors. Middlemarch by George Eliot was written and published in the 1870s instead of the 1890s. The book is written in a dry, somewhat academic style. A livelier and more reader friendly account of the same period may be found in A.N. Wilson's new book "After the Victorians." This was a book worth reading if you approach it as someone picking up a textbook.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Engaging!,
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This review is from: The Edwardians (Hardcover)
I was excited to see a brand new book devoted to the Edwardian era since the interest in the era seems to have died out in the 1970s. Though wordy at times, Hattersley brings to life the glamour and the harsh reality that existed side by side in a time that has been swept away by the World Wars. Hattersley's book is an excellent, and at times more detailed introduction into the era known as Edwardian--though books published in the 1970s and before have the benefit of being authored by contemporaries of the time and/or contemporaries of that time were still living.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A very STIFF upper lip!,
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This review is from: The Edwardians (Hardcover)
This book was definitely not what I expected! I didn't realize that it was going to be so drily political. Having said that, after plodding through it, I have to admit it did explain a great deal of the whys & wherefores of the edwardian era. This is definitely NOT a light read!
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Good Read, Save For The Literature,
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This review is from: The Edwardians (Hardcover)
Rot Hattersley is a politician. He has been a prominent member of the Labour party for some time, as MP, deputy leader, and cabinet minister. He still sits in the House of Lords. What does one get when a lifelong politician pens a book about an era? It should come as no surprise that the politics of the era predominates. For those interested in the labyrinthine machinations between the various MPs and PMs and whatnot during the time, Hattersley's book lacks for nothing. I was particularly impressed with his account of the Finance Bill and how it forced a coalition government at the time, with Irish Home Rulers reaping the benefit. But for those who haven't stood (One doesn't run in England.) for a seat in the House of Commons or have not devoted their lives to the history of parliamentary politics, the first couple hundred pages may make for a bit of a snooze. But the book is otherwise very well done indeed. Hattersley's account of the suffragettes will shock any Yank notions of English ladies gleaned from watching Masterpiece Theatre too often. Also - and this development could constitute a book in itself - his account of the rise of professionalism in sports is spot on. Brits and Yanks both in this early 21st Century, late Elizabethan era need to be reminded that it wasn't so long ago that anyone who played sports for a living was looked down upon as hopelessly déclassé rather than idolised.My primary grouse with this work is that Hattersley makes a dog's breakfast of things when it comes to literature. Yes, he gives Yeats his fair accolade. How could he not? But not only, as another reviewer has already adduced, does Hattersley postdate the publication of Middlemarch by a score of years, but he seems not to even have read The Ambassadors by Henry James. I agree that it is James's best novel, but apparently Hattersley read an entirely different version than the rest of us: Strether does not leave America for England, but for France (Paris to be more precise). And he does not find there - Perish the thought! - that "pragmatism becomes more important than principle." He discovers that aesthetic pleasure becomes more important than principle. Also, Hattersley's assertion that James was a closet homosexual is hotly disputed. In Edel's definitive biography, he comes out as more asexual than anything, possibly due to a mishap when he was a child. But, aside from this muddle he makes of literature, Hattersley has done a bang-up job of covering the Edwardians. Nice apropos pictures here as well. |
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The Edwardians by Roy Hattersley (Hardcover - June 1, 2005)
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