Most Helpful Customer Reviews
50 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Less might have been more!, December 31, 2002
This book tries to be so many things at once that it ends up being none of them at all. Maybe it is simply impossible to write a coherent book about an entire century if you want to encompass all of its essentials. Every chapter here contains at least two or three themes that in themselves would warrant a book of this size (724 pages). Not to mention the characters: their number is staggering. Wilson never tires of giving us mini-biographies, but there are simply too many of them, so that it becomes impossible to keep up with them (for this reader at least). All in all the final impression is that of a vast collection of snapshots with no organizing principle to string them together other than simple chronology - and not even that is completely consistent. Coherence is not helped by Wilson's way of linking subjects, which struck me as peculiarly associative. Maybe the novelist inside got the better of him. However, it is his novelistic style of writing that makes this book pleasant to read even if it is ultimately unsatisfying. Wilson has clear opinions about the characters he describes and the events they participate in, and doesn't keep them to himself. He is not afraid to unmask the saccharine hypocrisies we still carry with us regarding the Victorians. Florence Nightingale, it turns out for instance, may have been an admirable woman, she was also as racially prejudiced as most of her contemporaries and did not allow a very well qualified black woman named Mary Seacole to work in her hospital. In the end it was Seacole though who did the really tough work at the Crimean front, while Nightingale worked at a safe distance. Queen Victoria gets some rough treatment (as well as, in passing, Elizabeth II, when Wilson states with some disdain that Victoria was 'only slightly better educated than the present monarch', which is clearly not intended as a compliment). On the other hand, Prince Albert can count on almost boundless admiration and is depicted as something not far short of a universal genius. Not only his intelligence and statesmanship are praised to the heavens, even his efforts as an amateur composer are rated very highly indeed (Wilson's opinion that the princely compositions surely outclass those of Vaughan Williams did make me wonder whether the author's acquaintance with VW's oeuvre extends anywhere beyond Greensleeves...). But all these people are in fact only minor characters on Wilson's huge canvas, where the politicians dominate the scene. If there is any red thread discernible in his book, it is the political history of the Victorian era, including its economics, colonialism and warfare. Descriptions are sketchy and, I would guess, hard to follow at times if you weren't already familiar with the basics, but the characters are described very deftly and really come off the paper. Moreover, one of the most striking assets of this book is the way in which Wilson demonstrates to what extent Victorian politics influenced our present-day reality. He also shows how lust for power, lack of vision or mere parochialism and narrow-mindedness can result in decisions that have the most gruesome consequences in the longer run: one can think of more than a few present-day politicians you would want to read these passages! I don't know who to advise this book to. Though it is not bad, it is too garbled to be of much use to somebody unfamiliar with the Victorian era. And those who have a deeper seated interest in this epoch will probably be better off buying books that deal in greater depth with subjects that are merely touched upon here. For instance, when it comes to sociology, culture and psychology Peter Gay's excellent cycle `The Bourgeois Experience` has rather more to offer.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Loved the book , but......, December 4, 2005
I enjoyed this book tremendously and consider it one of the treasures of my ever-growing Victorian history shelves. The only complaint (if my statement can be considered a 'true' complaint) is that the book presupposes a deeper knowledge of British history and its historical figures than most Americans (shamefully points to herself) have. I might suggest to those thinking of reading this book that they begin with a more basic overview of the times and then proceed to this volume.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This "Before" Worthy of the "After", September 7, 2007
As a committed contrarian and one who thought he had read enough about Victorian England to skip "The Victorians", I went directly to "After the Victorians" and having it enjoyed it tremendously, had to re-double and get back to the beginning, if you will. And it was worth it. As demonstrated by other reviews, it is somewhat difficult to categorize Wilson's approach to this ever-fascinating period. It's too opinionated to be "History" and too historical to be merely opinion. He calls each of these volumes a "portrait of an age", and I think that's close enough. As always, the important question is whether this or any other tome (and this IS a tome) justifies the time and effort necessary to digest it. To me, the answer is an unqualified yes. I believe what makes the book (and its successor) so enjoyable is Wilson's thorough command of his subject which in turn enables him to recount events and the lives and relationships of various personages with a sure, and frequently offbeat, hand. He knows what he's talking about and thus feels free to tell the story in his own way rather than as might be expected from a more traditional historian. And at least this reader thoroughly enjoyed "his own way".
And, by the way, if you're looking for a book on the everyday lives of the Victorians, try Judith Flanders' "Inside the Victorian Home"; terrifically well-told story by a marvelous writer.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|