Review
A fitting gift for your favorite Anglophile would be
Pepys Diary, one of the finest recorded books [brought to you by HighBridge Audio] in many years. A lusty adulterer with a sharp tongue and observant eye, Samuel Pepys provides a firsthand account of the Plague and the Great Fire of London. The text is brought to life by Kenneth Branagh, whose narration breathes despair, compassion, desire and humor into descriptions of days long past. --
Boston Globe, December 1, 1996Top 20 Audio of 1996 [brought to you by HighBridge Audio] --
Library Journal, May 15, 1996
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Product Description
Enter the life and remarkable times of the lovable Samuel Pepys (pronounced “peeps”). Born in London in 1633, the son of a tailor, he began keeping a diary on January 1, 1660, and continued for nine years, faithfully recording the rich and varied details of 17th-century London life. Writing in a form of shorthand—which was not deciphered until 1825—he also painted a vivid picture of Pepys the man.
In entries from 1660 through 1663, Pepys strives to establish himself in his career and in society. His unforgettable eyewitness accounts of the Plague and the Great Fire of London follow. The last diaries, dated 1667 through 1669, Pepys is enjoying his position as a surveyor-general in the Royal Navy—and having an affair with his wife’s servant. Uniquely uninhibited, deeply personal, full of wit and style, Pepy's Diary is a biographical masterpiece.
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