Item added to cart
London has the greatest literary tradition of any city in the world. Its roll call of storytellers includes cultural giants like Shakespeare, Defoe, and Dickens, and an innumerable host of writers of all sorts who sought to capture the essence of the place.
Acclaimed historian Jerry White has collected some twenty-six stories to illustrate the extraordinary diversity of both London life and writing over the past four centuries, from Shakespeare’s day to the present. These are stories of fact and fiction and occasionally something in between, some from well-known voices and others practically unknown. Here are dramatic views of such iconic events as the plague, the Great Fire of London, and the Blitz, but also William Thackeray’s account of going to see a man hanged, Thomas De Quincey’s friendship with a teenaged prostitute, and Doris Lessing’s defense of the Underground. This literary London encompasses the famous Baker Street residence of Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes and the bombed-out moonscape of Elizabeth Bowen’s wartime streets, Charles Dicken’s treacherous River Thames and Frederick Treves’s tragic Elephant Man. Graham Greene, Jean Rhys, Muriel Spark, and Hanif Kureishi are among the many great writers who give us their varied Londons here, revealing a city of boundless wealth and ragged squalor, of moving tragedy and riotous joy.Preface
Thomas Dekker
“London, lying sicke of the Plague” (1603)
John Evelyn
“The Great Fire of London” (1666)
Daniel Defoe
“A Ragged Boyhood” (1722)
Samuel Whyte
“A Visit to Charlotte Cibber” (1795)
James Lackington
“Love Among the Methodists” (1792)
Thomas de Quincey
“Ann of Oxford Street” (1822)
William Makepeace Thackeray
“Going to see a Man Hanged” (1840)
Henry MlS.
Copyright © 2018 - 2024 ShopSpell