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BRITISH HISTORICAL BOOKS

Posted in British Historical (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)

Written by Philip Hoare. By Arcade Publishing. The regular list price is $25.95. Sells new for $5.00. There are some available for $1.17.
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2 comments about Oscar Wilde's Last Stand.
  1. This is how history should be written: exhaustively researched, well organized, good command of the language. This book goes way beyond what the title promises, giving us an encompassing social history of the "upper classes" of Britain from 1900 to 1918. Many surprises here, all of them believable. The only request: to give us, in an appendix, a more thorough vitae of the players.


  2. There are a number of ways to count the trials of Oscar Wilde, but what's becoming widely known as the "fourth" Oscar Wilde trial is a fascinating incident which occurred after his death. It is certainly must reading for anyone wanting to be acquainted with the Wilde story; especially if you're American. Maud Allen, the Canadian-American who brought about the libel action which initiated the trial, is familar to Canadians and some Americans since Felix Cherniavsky's 1991 book "The Salome Dancer" was published and mentioned this incident. And now Philip Hoare, a Briton, provides us with a fuller treatment of the trial's flow. Hoare's book is nicely written and has some stunning photographs of Maud Allan performing on stage. My only criticism is that Mr. Hoare says Ms. Allan's opponent, Noel Pemberton Billing, was "Mosley Before His Time." He refers to Sir Oswald Mosley, a later leader of the British fascists. If Mr. Hoare really knew his fascists, rather than his sterotypes, he would know that Mosley affiliated with the left wing tradition as a moderate member of parliment. Mosley continued to advocate those economic remedies as a fascist, continued his interest and associations with Britains's cultural vanguard, and was remarkably tolerant about homosexuals. In fact, it's no secret that Mosley's son by a first marriage, Nicolas, was homosexual, and to that son Mosley left the papers detailing his long, extraordinary, and tragic career. Today Nickolas is a prominent and respected liberal novelist, and his books about his father, Rules of the Game and Beyond the Pale, indicate that respect was mutual.


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Posted in British Historical (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)

Written by Margaret Hoby. By Alan Sutton Publishing,. There are some available for $22.98.
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No comments about The Private Life of an Elizabethan Lady: The Diary of Lady Margaret Hoby 1599-1605.



Posted in British Historical (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)

By University Of Chicago Press. The regular list price is $50.00. Sells new for $5.51. There are some available for $5.51.
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No comments about Elizabeth I: Autograph Compositions and Foreign Language Originals.



Posted in British Historical (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)

Written by Carolly Erickson. By Simon & Schuster. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $15.70. There are some available for $8.50.
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5 comments about Her Little Majesty: The Life of Queen Victoria.
  1. This is a small book for such a large subject. It keeps to the facts and indeed it does not overwhelm you with those. I found some of the expressions used in the book to be a little odd, almost as if the writer was trying to write in style that she thinks is "real" English.

    I enjoyed the book and it has made me want to learn more about this quite remarkable woman. In short ;read it and enjoy , but don't expect to be turned into an expert by the end of the book.



  2. This book is very well written. THere are many similies and metaphors which put you back into the life of Queen Victoria. It is an educational book, yet it reads like a story. It is most definetly not like most historical non-fiction books.


  3. This is a very brief and often inaccurate portrayal of Queen Victoria and the 19th century, during a time when everything that people knew and accepted was changing. For a more accurate biography about Queen Victoria, I suggest "Victoria Victorious" by Jean Plaidy. Much better.


  4. I was hoping for a lot more from this book after reading other reviews and noting how many biographies of famous women Carolly Erickson has written. Frankly this book read like a student's history project, that is, essentially a time-line with only a small effort to truly express who Queen Victoria was. The book was not very captivating and I only finished it because it was the only book I had on an 8 hour flight. There are probably better biographies of the Little Queen out there.


  5. Like most reviewers, I found this delightful little volume a good read, without the detail one normally encounters in a biography. One gathers from this work that the the queen's unhappy childhood had a profound effect upon the rest of her life; including, in rather a perverse way, the relationship with her husband, whom she is said to have both adored and harassed.

    I have to admit that I purchased my new copy for one pound in London (remainder!). I am doubtful if I would have paid full price. But a good read.


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Posted in British Historical (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)

Written by Lisa Degnen. By Grand Central Publishing. The regular list price is $9.99. Sells new for $3.25. There are some available for $0.01.
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5 comments about Prince William: Prince of Hearts.
  1. Although I found "Teen People"'s book to be well-researched, I was disappointed. It was well-written, had plenty of pictures of the photogenic prince, and had nice little bits of information about the royal family, but I still was upset about the book.

    I belong to an organization that is attempting to bring some peace to teenage celebrities' (especially teenage royals') lives. In this age of "stalkerazzi" and constant intrusion, we are trying to keep them from being beseiged. These days, satellite communications and the internet have made it even easier for celebrities to become famous the world-over.

    Our ardent wish is that you would think over WHY you are buying the book. We have heard that Prince William doesn't like the press, and We believe that he wouldn't want to be exploited the way TEEN PEOPLE has done with this book. Please think over how YOU would feel in his shoes.

    Finally, please remember that Prince William is a REAL HUMAN BEING who has emotions also. Even though his popularity transcends countries and language barriers, he may feel strongly about this book being published.

    Please think over your decision carefully.



  2. Finally, a book that has good pictures, accurate content, and it's fun to read. It's about time they figure out what they're talking about. I gave this book five stars for two reasons: 1) The text is up-to-date, and well researched. 2) Most "un" authorized books you read usually fill you with lies, this one doesn't. I recomend this book to readers of all ages. Believe me, it's a steal at 7.99.


  3. This was one of the best books on Prince William I have ever read. It had great pictures and interesting things I never knew before. Teen People went out of there way to get an inside view on the "Prince of Hearts!" I loved this book from start to finish. I would recommend this book to anyone who is a Prince William fanatic of would just like to learn more about him!


  4. This is the probably the best book you'll find on him. It offers some realistic info on the Prince and his life. A defenite 'Excellent' buy.


  5. This is a wonderful book for people of all ages. it gives lots of information from the day prince william was born up to the present day.It gives information on the history of the last name mountbatten. It's a wonderful book to read and it's so good you'll never want to put it down.


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Posted in British Historical (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)

Written by Richard Buskin. By Consumer Guide. The regular list price is $6.99. Sells new for $2.57. There are some available for $0.01.
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2 comments about Prince William: Born to Be King.
  1. The author promises to let the reader know: " Why William was know as 'Billy the Basher,' How he coped with his parents' troubled marriage, What he does for fun and excitement, Why his former nanny is now his closest friend, and How he feels about being popular with girls all over the world." Richard Buskin does accomplished these things. However, if one has kept up with the Royal Family, then, one know everything in the book and much more. Princes William possesses many more nicknames than just 'Billy the Basher.'

    Despite this, the book is well-written which one can not say about many of the books written about Prince William. This book can be appreciated by adults and not just gushing teenagers who are crazy over Prince William. It's easy reading and can be easily read in an hour.

    Richard Buskin has written several books about the Royal Family - Diana in particular.

    Prince William has had to grow up rapidly considering the events which have taken place in his life. As everyone knows, the world is on the verge of a new millennium, and for William, the twenty-first century king, it appears to be there for the taking. There are many picture of Prince William from infancy to the present; however, there are no new ones.

    Since the death of his mother, the late Diana, Princess of Wales, Prince William has grown into a mature young man, and whatever the future holds, the eyes of the world will certainly be on Prince William.

    This is a paperback book which contains 159 pages and measures 4x63/4 inches.



  2. I live in England but, do you know, I've never followed the activities of the royal family. It's not always something special when you've grown up with it all your life, and they've done much to let themselves down in the past 20 years, the poor souls. So I've never followed Prince William and, really, know nothing about him. That is, I didn't until I read this book. I was at O'Hare airport in Chicago, flying back to England, when I saw it in at the bookstall. Something made me take it off the shelf - I've no idea to this day why - and it caught my interest as I flicked idly through the pages. I immediately liked the writing style - it's very descriptive, but not too much: it's artfully done. Why, for just a few bucks I got to learn more, much more than I ever thought I'd want to know about William. But I enjoyed it! It's quite a rollercoaster story, and an amusing though pretty accurate insight into British life and culture, written by one who should know - The author biography says that Mr Buskin "is a British journalist". It shows. (It also says that another of his books, about Princess Diana, was a New York Times bestseller. That must be one heck of a book - I'm already looking out for a copy.) I think Buskin must be a pretty savvy guy, and he certainly writes a witty line reminiscent of the British Carry On films. For example, I think he had tongue firmly in cheek when he wrote: "And so the stage was set: His naughtiness was about to evolve into Dreamboat Willy."


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Posted in British Historical (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)

Written by Ben Wright and Michael Patrick Shiels. By Sleeping Bear Press. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $0.01. There are some available for $0.01.
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5 comments about Good Bounces & Bad Lies: The Autobiography of Ben Wright.
  1. Wright is as witty and colorful as his broadcasts were. Gives an image of broadcasting which most of us aren't aware of. We sense the morals and ethics of these public individuals are different. Appreciated even more his love for the game and extreme pain the LPGA comments have brought upon him. Image is everything!


  2. CBS, BRING THIS GUY BACK! If you want a good read that will absolutely make you CRY with laughter. This is the book for you...And you don't have to be a Golf fan to enjoy it. I always figured that stranged things happened behind the camera, but his stories will absolutely crack you up. It is definitely a MUST buy.


  3. Ben Wright does a superb job in taking mere golfing mortals behind the scenes of some famous, and some not so famous, tournaments to give an insight into LIFE in the golfing world. It is a page turner that had me howling with laughter as he strips bare the mystique behind both golf broadcasting and some of the peripheral characters that add to the colour of the sport. Of course in the true style that has endeared him to so many he also takes a few swipes at some brighter lights in the business of golf. Wright has an obvious deep love for the game but he does not let sentimentality get in the way of a good story. I am sure that he must have a stock of untold tales waiting to be let out of the closet and I look forward to the next installment from this very funny, very English and very lovable raconteur.


  4. Wright's book basically, after he gets through some obligatory stories about golf in England when he was young, is a tell all about most of the peole he has worked with at CBS Sports. If it is not a tell all, it will do 'til one comes around. Most of the problem is with alcohol...we hear of interventions, wild partys, stupid episodes of behavior...yet through it all...even after an intervention which sent him to Betty Ford...one of the staff told him before he left that he was not an alcoholic but an abuser of alcohol. What that distinction is remains lost to me but was understood by Ben. No matter. You wonder how CBS managed to produce a cohesive telecast of the Masters or any other tournament they were assigned to based on Ben's recollections. He also ran into some world travelers that he thought behaved badly. It is a "tell all" from one who is still in the dog house for telling all about his opinion of women's golf and the difference betwen the men's game and theirs. No matter that he had that just right,,,he was PC'd out and the world of golf broadcasting is the worse for it. I miss him behind the microphone, but the book goes a bit long.


  5. Wright's tales are stupendous, but to the point of being absurd. This is one of the few books in years that I finally just put down. He defects from the army to watch Hogan, his house is reduced to rubble but he and his sister miraculously survive; his overzealous buddy grabs a waiter and pulls him outside to beat him senseless...sheesh. I liked Wright as a commentator but leave this book on the shelf.


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Posted in British Historical (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)

Written by Stephen Eaton Hume. By Harbour. The regular list price is $16.95. Sells new for $5.95. There are some available for $5.95.
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No comments about Raincoast Chronicles 20: Lilies and Fireweed: Frontier Women of British Columbia (Raincoast Chronicles).



Posted in British Historical (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)

Written by Richard West and Daniel Defoe. By Carroll & Graf Pub. The regular list price is $26.00. Sells new for $6.15. There are some available for $0.45.
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4 comments about Daniel Defoe: The Life and Strange, Surprising Adventures.
  1. With the tools of a storyteller, Richard West takes his readers on a journey to the world of the enigmatic Daniel Defoe and the political machinations of Britain at the dawn of the 18th century. To any reader,even to one who has a limited understanding of British history, West paves a path among the intrigue of the Whigs and Tories, and has his reader follow the footsteps of Defoe into the Tower of London, the roads of Great Britain, and the gardens of rulers. With the ability to explain Defoe's mysterious background, West guides the reader toward an understanding of a man who has remained elusive for centuries. West offers the reader an explanation for the many masks that Defoe wore as writer, invester, spy and traveler. With the skill of a story-teller, West opens a world of historic fact even to the most reluctant non-fiction reader.


  2. West provides a very readable, unfussy biography, presenting a vivid and detailed portrait of Defoe's life and times. He falls short with his "analysis" of the novels, which amounts to little more than plot summary, but his insight into Defoe's character--as a man of high moral principle who occasionally succumbed to expediency--is priceless.


  3. In Daniel Defoe: The Life And Strange, Surprising Adventures, biographer Richard West tells the story of Daniel Defoe, a maverick, a Puritan, and a dissenter without a constituency. Defoe was also a bankrupt who rubbed elbows with a king, a hack who never failed to pursue the truth. And the writer who produced such literary classics as Moll Flanders, Roxana, A Journal of the Plague Year, and Robinson Crusoe. Defoe's life was every bit as dramatic and unexpected as the protagonists of his famous novels. West has wonderfully and scrupulously recreated the remarkable personality and the colorful times that shaped and were shaped by this noted, fascinating, unique and historic literary figure.


  4. The foreward is interesting and helps to put this biography in perspective. Richard West candidly indicates that he was much influenced by Paula R. Backscheider's Daniel Defore: His Life which is now out of print. I got the impression that this biography may be based on that book plus West's enjoyment reading Defoe. A biography can often provide an interesting window into a particular time and place. It's interesting reading about the Glorious Revolution and the reign of Queen Anne, but disconcerting to have so many quotes from classic history by Macaulay and Trevelyan. It feels like one is getting a narrow and somewhat dated version of the period. One does not get the full texture that only a historian who has read widely and deeply in particular period of history can provide. But we get a lot of Defoe's own words and West himself is a good story teller so if one is looking for an entertaining biography why quibble whether the setting is Macaulay's storybook England rather than the real thing (whatever that may be).


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Posted in British Historical (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)

By Cork University Press. The regular list price is $10.00. Sells new for $11.61. There are some available for $32.20.
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No comments about A Policeman's Ireland: Recollections of Samuel Waters, R.I.C. (Irish Narrative Series).



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Oscar Wilde's Last Stand
The Private Life of an Elizabethan Lady: The Diary of Lady Margaret Hoby 1599-1605
Elizabeth I: Autograph Compositions and Foreign Language Originals
Her Little Majesty: The Life of Queen Victoria
Prince William: Prince of Hearts
Prince William: Born to Be King
Good Bounces & Bad Lies: The Autobiography of Ben Wright
Raincoast Chronicles 20: Lilies and Fireweed: Frontier Women of British Columbia (Raincoast Chronicles)
Daniel Defoe: The Life and Strange, Surprising Adventures
A Policeman's Ireland: Recollections of Samuel Waters, R.I.C. (Irish Narrative Series)

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Last updated: Wed Aug 20 18:13:06 EDT 2008