The tavern, the inn, the coffee house, the tea shop: these are places where, throughout history, we have met and socialized and where the issues of the day could be discussed over a drink. Postal services developed between networks of inns and enabled modern communication. The first insurance companies were created in the coffee houses. Gin palaces prompted moral outrage. The suffragette movement found its birthplace in tea shops which allowed women to meet across social classes. This generously illustrated book unveils the little-known ways that drinks, whether alcoholic or caffeinated, have found their place at the center of our social and political lives.
"The book is published by the British Library . . . The library’s involvement means the illustrations are sumptuous: every page has something delightful, from a mischievous painting of a 13th-century French monk tippling from the barrel to a Cruikshank cartoon on fighting in the coffee shop." —New Statesman
Ruth Ballis the author ofRebellious Spirits: An Illicit History of Spirits in Britain. She is also the founder and Head Alchemist at Alchemist Dreams, a company dedicated to making handmade liqueurs blended to order.