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A History of the English People [Paperback]

Paul Johnson (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 1987
A panoramic survey of 2,000 years of English history. 14 cassettes.
--This text refers to the Audio Cassette edition.

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Product Details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Harper Torchbooks (November 1987)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061320757
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061320750
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.8 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #591,180 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Beginning with Modern Times (1985), Paul Johnson's books are acknowledged masterpieces of historical analysis. He is a regular columnist for Forbes and The Spectator, and his work has also appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and many other publications.

 

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Average Customer Review
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars His Funniest History, December 13, 2004
This review is from: A History of the English People (Paperback)
I finally found a copy of this. It was falling apart, and I could peel out each page as I read it, but it was well worth the misery! In "A History of the English People," Paul Johnson recounts the story of the English with both loving admiration and seething disdain; his people are to him "a huge force of good and evil."

Most historians have their biases, but they mask them subtly and fairly successfully under the shadow of their academic-style prose; Paul Johnson, however, is so outright with his prejudices in this, his most opinionated history, that reading the book is at times almost comical. Queen Elizabeth, it seems, could do no wrong. If she directed murder, it was "against her will." She "was forced, with great reluctance" to persecute the Catholics and the Puritans, because "both groups, in the end, left her with little alternative." The Queen was a paragon of tolerance, whose greatest achievement was to establish "the religious system of England on a basis of moderation." James, on the other hand, was a "loutish savage." Indeed, Johnson is as expansive in his condemnation of the Stuarts as in his praise for Elizabeth: "Those who decry the influence of personality on history find it hard to argue away the speed, the perverse skill, and the absolute decisiveness with which the Stuarts demolished their English heritage."

Johnson is a clever writer, and he manipulates language effectively. It is not the kind of wordplay one expects to encounter in a history. His descriptions are memorable: the Puritans "oozed hypocrisy,"* America "was the posthumous child of the Long Parliament." Many of the author's phrases are entertaining because they are tongue-in-cheek. Witch hunters, he tells us, were accused of seeking economic gain, "[b]ut this seems too cruel and cynical even for the English." The reason the English became such a powerful force in history was owing largely to their racism, but "[q]uite when they first took note of the fact that they were the successor-race to the Jews is impossible to determine." "It is a sad comment on human societies," Johnson writes, "that they can usually be persuaded to accept bribery as a system of government, provided the circle of corruption is wide enough."

If the English are not safe from the historian's barb, we cannot hope that the Americans will be. Indeed, Johnson explodes the romantic view we American's have of our revolution, but not without a little romanticism of his own. The movement toward independence was, he writes, "an unholy alliance" between landowners and "swarming" lawyers, who united to manipulate the "Boston city mob" so that "America was born in organized violence masquerading as idealism." The "insurgents," he claims, "scalp[ed] and mutilate[d] British redcoats." He compares the American War for Independence to the Communist Revolution in Russia, in which "a small group of single-minded and ruthless men hustled along a multitude." Once the nation was independent, it proved no more capable than England: "Free Americans continued to kill each other in the lapidary shadows of the windy rhetoric from Philadelphia." In summary, the English people "gave birth to a noisy, noble and flawed offspring, lavishing on it their traditional christening-gifts of idealism and hypocrisy." The "lingering consciousness of divine destiny" motivates America even today (i.e. 1972), writes Johnson, "in a hideously debased and perverted form - as the CIA and KGB, like God and Satan, fight Miltonic battles across five continents." I wonder how Mr. Johnson feels now that our hideously debased and perverted sense of divine destiny has caused the communist empire to crumble. It is little wonder this volume is so hard to come by in the States. (The book is out of print and the one copy I could secure was literally falling apart in my hands.) Johnson is much more generous in his History of the American People.

A History of the English People is not for the sensitive, or for the unlearned. But it can be thoroughly enjoyed by the well-read and the thick-skinned, and it is, from a purely literary (if not a historical) perspective, the most-well written of Johnson's books.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Phenominal Acheivement, March 11, 2002
By 
Jon S Hjartberg (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
I'm surprised it's taken me so long to discover Paul Johnson. This brisk review of English history is not an over-intellectualized ideological rant, or the in-depth study of a tiny sliver of the English experience, but a broad, almost Spenglerian review of the English epic, and how they got to where they are today. It is filled with judgement and wisdom. This unabridged audio book is exceptionally well read by one of my all-time favorite readers, Nadia May. You're in for a treat, whether you're an Anglophile, or want a basic review of the English experience.
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