
Especially if you're interested in Stuart Britain!
I doubted I'd finish this this year, but I've just sneaked it in!

Especially if you're interested in Stuart Britain!
I doubted I'd finish this this year, but I've just sneaked it in!
The narration was excellent, but the way it was written was confusing for me as someone new to the study of 17th century England. I didn‘t understand why some aspects were heavily covered and some were barely touched on.
3/5 Read for a brief history of the British Civil War, a long history of the religious turmoil that led to it, & a smattering of history of thought, including an in depth but limited in scope discussion of The Blazing World

This is basically a fresh look at the Stuart dynasty. The 17th century really was a tumultuous time for England, Scotland and Ireland. The author really digs into the details of religious strife and social upheaval. There‘s plague! There‘s fire! And that‘s just 1666! If you want to know the difference between the Protectorate and the Glorious Revolution this book will set you straight! 🍊👑🔥🐀

I wasn't expecting this, but this book was easily one of the best books I've read this year -- lucid, witty, well-written. I learned a ton about revolutionary England and my interest was held the whole time. Would make a great follow-up to Lucy Wooding's Tudor England: A History.

Not the typical #SundaySentence but Jonathan Healey's comment on Cromwell's foreign policy made made me laugh: “Suffering a bout of Elizabethan nostalgia, he decided to attack Spain.“ (In _The Blazing World_).

“Probably the strangest way anyone celebrated the accession of King James I of England was when a gentlewoman in the far north of Lancashire organised a mock wedding in a country church, between two male servants.“
#FridayReads #FirstLineFriday