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The Time Traveller's Guide to Regency Britain
The Time Traveller's Guide to Regency Britain | Ian Mortimer
23 posts | 9 read | 1 reading | 13 to read
'Ian Mortimer's Time Traveller's Guide to Regency Britain tells you all you need to know about criminals, disease, beggars and other late Georgian delights if you ever find yourself visiting the 1790s.' Daily Telegraph, History Books of the Year This is the age of Jane Austen and the Romantic poets; the paintings of John Constable and the gardens of Humphry Repton; the sartorial elegance of Beau Brummell and the poetic licence of Lord Byron; Britain's military triumphs at Trafalgar and Waterloo; the threat of revolution and the Peterloo massacre. In the latest volume of his celebrated series of Time Traveller's Guides, Ian Mortimer turns to what is arguably the most-loved period in British history - the Regency, or Georgian England. A time of exuberance, thrills, frills and unchecked bad behaviour, it was perhaps the last age of true freedom before the arrival of the stifling world of Victorian morality. At the same time, it was a period of transition that reflected unprecedented social, economic and political change. And like all periods in history, it was an age of many contradictions - where Beethoven's thundering Fifth Symphony could premier in the same year that saw Jane Austen craft the delicate sensitivities of Persuasion. Once more, Ian Mortimer takes us on a thrilling journey to the past, revealing what people ate, drank and wore; where they shopped and how they amused themselves; what they believed in and what they were afraid of. Conveying the sights, sounds and smells of the Regency period, this is history at its most exciting, physical, visceral - the past not as something to be studied but as lived experience.
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Birdsong28
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Pickpick

Very good. Very detailed but sometimes the details got bogged down and I felt like the author was try to hard to include everything in this guide. Learnt a lot about the Regency period.

#TheBodleyHead
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#Penquin
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Birdsong28
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Thank you @StayCurious for letting me join in on this. I haven't finished it yet as I was enjoying being part of it but as you know I got ill during and I haven't been able to get back into it. I did try but I just couldn't get back into it. Thank you for letting me be a part of this.

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IndoorDame
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I couldn‘t help wanting at least 50% of this book to be pictures. The tiny appendix of images wasn‘t nearly enough and should have at least been embedded in the text. When I realized I wouldn‘t get that wish I switched to audio which was the best decision! The author has a truly fabulous reading voice, and it made it way easier to keep pace with the super-long daily chapters. My complaints aside, this was great!⬇️⬇️⬇️

IndoorDame I learned so much about so many unexpected aspects of regency life, and the writing wasn‘t dry at all so this came alive in a way nonfiction histories rarely do for me. #Pemberlittens @StayCurious 1y
Ruthiella There were pictures in the print book, but still, I googled a ton! 😅 1y
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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens - Entertainment was a fitting way to end and I found the chapter lived up to its name. Overall, I enjoyed this book. It wasn‘t overly long winded, the pacing was good, the research was well done, and the separation of the classes to learn about everyone was easy to follow. My ebook did have pictures at the end but I feel they could have served better placed within the material. But I do know a lot more about Jane‘s time than before.

inthegreensandblues Entertainment was definitely ending on a high note! I really enjoyed this book too. Now I want to listen to Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. 😄 I've never thought of it as late Regency music before. 1y
inthegreensandblues Thank you for hosting the read-along, Renee! 1y
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IndoorDame @inthegreensandblues I also want to listen to the 9th symphony after reading this chapter! 1y
IndoorDame Thanks for hosting Renee! I loved how readable this was for a history. I especially appreciated learning about the politics in more detail because that‘s always been sort of muddled in my mind. 1y
CoffeeNBooks I enjoyed reading about the entertainment as well. Thanks so much for hosting! 1y
AnnR I'm behind in my reading but do plan to finish soon. A really interesting historical analysis of the Regency period so far. Thank you Renee for hosting and all the fun posts. 1y
Ruthiella I enjoyed this chapter a lot. Thanks for hosting! It‘s been awesome 👏👏👏 1y
Bklover Thanks for hosting, Renee! I learned an awful lot- was fascinating stuff! 1y
Bklover @Ann_Reads I‘m a bit behind as well, but it‘s definitely been fascinating! 1y
TheAromaofBooks I really loved the way he used the entertainment chapter to remind us of how some aspects of the human experience are timeless and connect us all through all the generations. I found this book to be so friendly and accessible - I thoroughly enjoyed it. Thank you for hosting!! 1y
suvata I really enjoyed this book. And the last chapter was very uplifting and fun. It was definitely a lot of information to absorb, but I think it was fascinating to know how the Austen‘s lived and how her circumstances probably greatly affected her writing. So good. I‘m tempted to read a few more of his books. He definitely knows his stuff. Thank you for hosting this lively discussion. 1y
Bluebird Thanks for hosting! This was a fun. 1y
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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens Ch.11: I always found it interesting that practicing law was more respectable than being a doctor back in the day - from this book I‘ve learnt reasons why it was such a sought after profession. It must have been tedious and frustrating to have to work within the confines of a legal system that moved like molasses at times. It was interesting to learn about policing and transportation as well.

Bklover I‘m reading a section in Middlemarch where they talk about doctors only getting paid by selling medicine, not doctor fees, so I kind of see why they didn‘t get respect. People paid for the medicine- not the doctor. I still wouldn‘t have wanted to be a lawyer back then though. I keep wondering what they‘d have thought of the world today. 1y
Aimeesue @Bklover Yeah, I thought that part in Middlemarch was interesting too. How different things are today. For the most part, at least. 1y
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Bluebird I never understood the logic behind debtor‘s prison. A debtor cannot pay a bill, so is placed in a prison where they can not earn money to help repay it. And then rack up further bills for their upkeep-also likely also go unpaid. 🤷🏻‍♀️. I was very surprised to learn that even if they could repay what is owed, the creditor can refuse to accept it! I guess that is one way for a creditor to get the ultimate revenge on someone they don‘t like! 1y
suvata I can sort of believe the disparity between being a doctor versus law enforcement. If you think about it, in the regency era, the doctors had very little to work with. So, their care rate was not very good — no penicillin, no x-rays, no bloodwork, etc. On the other hand, law enforcement produced results. They imprisoned criminals. They caught thieves. Thus, making the area a little bit safer. Strange that today it is a 💯 flip. 1y
suvata @Bluebird I agree with you. Debtors prison is a counterproductive, vicious circle. 1y
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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens Ch.10 - I have a horrid fascination with old timey medicine so I enjoyed this chapter even if I found some stuff difficult to read. As with other chapters, the author doesn‘t pull punches. I‘m still cringing from the dentist section…and I was actually surprised that a large number of people cared about cleanliness.

TheAromaofBooks I was horrified by the descriptions of the insane asylums! It seems so horrific that you would turn over your loved one thinking that you were doing the best thing for them, only to have them chained and treated worse than animals. The flip side was learning about how this is the era where those things started to change. Amazing the difference a small group of people started!! 1y
Ruthiella The dentistry parts really got to me too. Yikes! 1y
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inthegreensandblues The condition of children working in factories got me... It's common knowledge that it was bad but the details really are horrific. 1y
suvata Another difficult chapter but very informative. Yeah, I think I would skip the dentist. I forgot that at this time they didn‘t know about germs, so they attributed many illnesses to absurd causes. 1y
suvata “On top of plain ignorance, you have wilful self-deception. Many gluttons know that large quantities of rich food are bad for them but they shut their minds to the likely consequences. You can say the same for those who rely heavily on laudanum. There is in all periods a propensity for people to satisfy their appetites despite the risks to their health, and to lie to themselves about the probable eventual outcomes.” 1y
Bluebird I also like the author‘s style. Straightforward and highly readable despite the horrific topics. And I like how he highlights some positive things at the end of several chapters. I didn‘t realize how the change came about that ended the insane asylum abuses. The dental procedures didn‘t bother me as much as the eye ones. Cataract surgery with only laudanum as an aesthetic. 😬 1y
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KristiAhlers
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This is a #Pemberlittens buddy read and a great addition to my #nonfictionreadingchallenge. I love how the author breaks down each chapter. I often wish I could go back in time for a day but after reading this book I'm glad to be here now with plumbing and modern medicine.

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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens Ch.9: sorry for another late post. When you have a toddler - you‘re on their schedule 😄. This was an interesting chapter and I liked how once again he broke it up to different levels of society. I love learning about the history of food and drink and the cost of everything. I don‘t think I would like the food much on visiting though. Sheep‘s udders? Calf‘s head?

Patchshank Lol. I love the toast description 1y
KristiAhlers I found this to be very interesting. I guess this was a case of waste not want not. But yeah. How hungry would you have to be to think sheep bladder. Yes please 🤣 1y
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IndoorDame Yeah, I love hearing about all the food, but I‘m pretty sure I‘d be on the tea and toast diet if I visited. 1y
Ruthiella It might be safest to stick to desserts when visiting. 1y
TheAromaofBooks I was thinking about how he was also saying that you would frequently pay for animals by the pound while they're still alive, then take it home to slaughter it yourself... which means eating every single part of it becomes pretty critical. But I'm not sure I would be into eating brains 😬 1y
Bklover @TheAromaofBooks I would probably end up with some very large pets! 🐄🐮 1y
TheAromaofBooks @Bklover - Fair enough!! 😂 1y
suvata @Ruthiella I believe you are correct. Desserts would be the safest choice. Or I might become a vegetarian. 1y
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suvata
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#Pemberlittens #JaneAdjacent February 2023 Read #ChapterADay @StayCurious

#StoryGraph: nonfiction history informative regency
442 pages • first pub 2020

“Ian Mortimer turns to what is arguably the most-loved period in British history - the Regency, or Georgian England. A time of exuberance, thrills, frills and unchecked bad behaviour, it was perhaps the last age of true freedom before the trarrival of the stifling world of Victorian morality.”

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#Pemberlittens Ch.8: just thinking about what you might catch in an inn…like in our last book. And reading about how poor people lived was rough. But I must admit to being fascinated with how the wealthy lived. There should be a show called “Regency Cribs”

suvata Regency Cribs 😂 I love it 1y
suvata Eww! “Some hard-pressed chambermaids don‘t change the sheets if they‘ve only been used once; either that or they just dampen them and dry them hurriedly before reusing them.” Remind me to never stay at an Inn. (edited) 1y
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inthegreensandblues Fascinating to read such detailed descriptions of all the different levels of housing. I think I'd like best like a gentleman's townhouse, with mahogany everything! 😆 1y
inthegreensandblues This was also interesting, re the extremely poor Scots who were literate, bilingual, "And welcoming to Frenchmen. You have to rethink what 'abject poverty' means when those who experience it do not care for worldly comforts yet pride themselves on their learning, their piety, and their hospitality." 1y
Bklover I wouldn‘t go anywhere. 1y
StayCurious @Bklover hahaha and yet people did all the time! 1y
CoffeeNBooks It might just be me, but it seems that the excesses of the Regency period are more excessive than at other times. 1y
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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens Ch.7: travelling would have been expensive! I wonder if there were ways to avoid the tolls on roads, especially if you travelled on foot. An interesting chapter. I think this would be a helpful book to authors who write regency romances. One thing that stuck out: people who walked were looked down upon. If you remember in our last book, the time travellers arrived at the inn and are treated poorly because they arrived by foot.

Bklover I think it‘s awful that women aren‘t allowed to bathe or shower on boats (but the men are!?) 1y
Ruthiella This makes me think of Northanger Abbey and how shocked Catherine is to have to take a public stagecoach home. 1y
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suvata And the time it took to get anywhere is what amazed me. Quote: Anne Lister, travelling from Chester to Manchester in 1822, declares the road ‘shockingly bad for two or three miles, full of great holes and pools of water‘ – and that is in July. In December it can take her almost two hours to travel just 7½ miles. — Kind of like “rush hour” in any major American city but with just a handful of traffic. #RoadRage 1y
IndoorDame @suvata I was thinking the same thing about rush hour commutes now 1y
CoffeeNBooks Yikes- I had no idea all of these carriages were so dangerous! "The Life Preserver" marketed to old ladies and people of a nervous disposition ? I would definitely take that transport! 1y
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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens Ch.5 overall an interesting chapter but I feel as though there were a lot of numbers mentioned. The mail system sounds crazy complicated and it‘s a wonder people sent so many letters. I thought it was interesting when he mentioned how basically everything is taxed now and in regency people would have been shocked.

Ruthiella This was a bit confusing (as is a money system not based on ten) but it was interesting because outside of semaphore, there was no other way to communicate across long distances. So letters were vitally important. I remember being a college student in the ‘80s when long distance telephoning was prohibitively expensive. I wrote and received letters all the time. 1y
suvata The first line of the Postal section says it all: “The Regency postal system is one of the most complex things ever invented.” And, it says there were no postal boxes, and no stamps. I agree with y‘all that it‘s crazy to think how many people communicated via mail back then when it was so hard to figure out. I imagine that poor people couldn‘t afford to send a letters at all. But, I guess it all worked out for them. 1y
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TheAromaofBooks And he didn't mention it, but wasn't “franking“ a letter still a thing? I've heard books mention it, but I'm not sure what it means? 1y
Birdsong28 Yes very very confused about the postage system 🤔🤔. Also glad to see that some things haven't changed i.e taxes and shopping . As with the shopping just like now it pays to shop around. With the taxes it goes to show that nothing came without a price. 1y
CoffeeNBooks I found the Hours of the Day section really interesting- it answered some questions I've had when reading books about this period. I also liked the section on Language and Politeness- I thought the slang words were interesting! 1y
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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens Ch:4 this chapter was long and I probably should have checked that while divvying up the book. Whoops, it took me an extra day. A lot of it was interesting, but the parts about animals being treated poorly got to me and I found it hard to read. I did find the part abt men being extra sensitive brought to mind that scene from Bedazzled (pictured above lol IYKYK).

Ruthiella It took me a while to get through it too! Definitely men in this era of Great Britain were not the strong silent types. Also dueling is just dumb. 1y
Birdsong28 Been really poorly so I have a few chapters to catch up with as I haven't felt up to reading. Keep tagging me and I will respond with what I think when I have caught up. @StayCurious 1y
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AnnR I found the author's opinion that Frankenstein is a better representation of the odd dualities in customs or beliefs during the Regency period. More so than Austen's novels anyway. That made sense, after reading the explanation about religious beliefs vs technological advances in the 1800s. 1y
AnnR @StayCurious Lol, the Bedazzled meme. I thought how odd people were when reading this. We probably still act in contradictory ways though. 1y
Bluebird @Ann_Reads i was also initially surprised by his opinion about Frankenstein, but agree with his thought process. I guess I really ought to read Frankenstein now. Lol. The closest I‘ve gotten to that work is the movie Young Frankenstein. 😂 1y
Bluebird This was a huge section and much to digest. I think i was most surprised to learn that while divorce was illegal, the sale of wife and/or children was perfectly acceptable. (edited) 1y
StayCurious @Birdsong28 hope you feel better soon! 1y
CoffeeNBooks Wow- there was a lot in this chapter! I couldn't finish the section about animals after I read the first paragraph. I found the section about duelling pretty interesting, as I had no idea there were so many rules involved. 1y
suvata What a chapter! It was pretty hard to get through not because of the length, but because of the contents. All the debauchery, yikes. While I was reading it, I kept thinking that a good thing the Victorians came afterwards and put a stop to some of those shenanigans. Although, if I read his book about the Victorians, it‘s probably just as bad. What is wrong with people? 1y
Birdsong28 Yes a very long chapter but very good. Very interesting to see all the different aspects. Some enlightening passages. 1y
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DebinHawaii
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My #librarybookhaul from yesterday. Picked up holds on the tagged book for #Pemberlittens & A Botanist‘s Guide to Parties and Poisons for #AuldLangSpine from @Laughterhp ‘s list & Funeral Girl & Accomplished caught my eye in YA. Then the library bookstore had 1/2-off fiction so I got the 3 remaining books there for $2.50. I‘m most excited about the pretty Waterstones Signed Exclusive Edition of Under the Whispering Door! 🤗
The book🐔🐔 approve!

AmyG Ooooo a signed book. And such a lovely one. 1y
DebinHawaii @AmyG It is lovely! I have it as an e-book & was planning on reading it for #AuldLangSpine already but I had to have this signed copy with the blue painted edges for $1. 🤗💙 1y
AmyG $1! 🙌🏻 1y
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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens Ch.3 - I found this chapter fascinating- I loved learning more about the social hierarchy- which was so very important in society. I liked learning about the different people who made names for themselves. I found the sections on the poorest members of society difficult to read - especially about the children. I think that‘s why Austen and other writers of regency romance tend to avoid mentioning that part. 👇

StayCurious If I time-travelled I‘d want to save them all! Also I think I need to find out more about Harriot Mellon - she sounds like my kind of woman! 1y
melissajayne It was very fascinating. Several times, while reading the chapter, I was like “oh fucking shit”. No wonder the Victorians were the way they were. 1y
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KristiAhlers Isn't it interesting to read about how things were back in the day? 1y
suvata This was definitely better than the last chapter. Who knew that Kings George III and IV were such contemptible characters? I particularly liked Harriot Mellon‘s rags-to-riches story at the end. 1y
Birdsong28 Yes I am really enjoying learning about all members of society and their place in it. 1y
Bklover The rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Also the life expectancies are awful, especially infant mortality. I‘m glad the chapter ended with the Harriet Mellon story- at least that was a bit uplifting. I wonder if it‘s any connection to Mellon bank. 1y
Bluebird I‘m really enjoying this book! I‘m reading via audio—narrated by the author. He is a great tour guide. I like the way in which he compares and contrasts the lives of the rich and poor. And agree..loved how he ended this chapter with Harriet Mellon. 1y
melissajayne @Bluebird it is really interesting how he compares and contrasts them. (edited) 1y
CoffeeNBooks The story of Harriet Mellon was definitely a great way to finish this section! 1y
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melissajayne
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For those reading the book for the #pemberlittens readalong, you might come across corn. This is a term that collectively includes any sort of grain: wheat, oat, barley, corn, etc.

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CoffeeNBooks
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Starting my Saturday morning reading trying to catch up on this one for #Pemberlittens. #coffeeandabook

Thank you Renee! @StayCurious

MoonWitch94 What a cool cover! 1y
Ruthiella I‘m also behind! 🙊 1y
StayCurious That‘s a pretty copy! 1y
maraguitarra Mine just came in (I had it in my cart and forgot to hit order🙈) hahaha so I‘m catching up tonight 1y
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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens Ch.2: sorry for the late post - I fell asleep at 7 last night! This chapter was interesting but also a bit boring - I wished there were pictures throughout of the different buildings that were described. The main thought I had was if I lived back then it sure would be better to have money. Also, if you were a good architect and were able to make a name for yourself you were set.

IndoorDame I was hoping before we started this that the book would have pictures. Since it doesn‘t, boo, I‘ve definitely googled a bunch myself, and also switched to audio which I‘m finding much easier to concentrate on. The author reads it himself and he has a fabulous voice!! 1y
IndoorDame Early bedtime sounds lovely ☺️ 💤 1y
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TheAromaofBooks I feel like it's a little odd that he's chosen to write so much in the present tense, second person. I don't dislike it, exactly, but it's rather different than most of these types of nonfiction books. 1y
TheAromaofBooks Also, my (hardcover, from the library) edition does have a few clusters of glossy bookplates, but while the pictures contained are labeled, there is no reference to where they match the text, and nothing in the text to indicate that I could find a picture by flipping to such-and-such plate. I'm very visual, so it's always disappointing when pictures and text information don't match!!! 1y
StayCurious @TheAromaofBooks I think he‘s writing it like a guide book for a time traveller - but it does take some getting used to 1y
MoonWitch94 @StayCurious I wish it did have pictures/drawings. But I also found this chapters a boring & skimmed a lot of it. 1y
Ruthiella I‘m also totally googling as I go. How ever did I read before the internet? 😜 1y
suvata I thought it boring too but maybe it‘s just a little letdown after how exciting chapter one was. Maps would have been helpful. 1y
Bklover @Ruthiella I know what you mean! I can‘t imagine not having google. This chapter felt a bit tedious to me. What changed in 20 years doesn‘t seem vitally necessary to know 1y
Birdsong28 Yes some pictures would make it a bit more interesting 1y
CoffeeNBooks @TheAromaofBooks I have the hardcover edition with some pictures also, and I agree that it would have been helpful if in the text it told you to look at illustration # on page# to help you visualize what was being referenced. I also wish there were aerial view illustrations of all of these major changes he describes- kind of like when you see pictures of the main street in your town over various decades, and you can picture the changes. 1y
CoffeeNBooks I like that it's written in 2nd person- it makes it feel more personal, like he's explaining just to me what to expect. Without a lot of pictures, I got bogged down in keeping track of everything he was explaining in this chapter, but I still found it pretty interesting though. I mostly noticed the changes in the living and working conditions of the people. The description of smog in 1810 really stood out to me. 1y
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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens Ch.1: Sorry…I‘m still trying to shake that description of how poor people lived in Liverpool. What an eye opening chapter! I always thought old-timey Britain was idyllic but the industrial revolution brought about a lot of difficulties and environmental destruction. It was great for rich people but I feel terrible for those who were trying to eke out a living only to have to return to a slum. What a miserable life!

IndoorDame I had a really hard time with this chapter! I know that it‘s obnoxious of me to both want to understand what life was like for these people and also not be able to handle the visceral descriptions of what they were forced to endure, but I‘m hoping later chapters are less intense 1y
AnnR I wasn't shocked by the 1st chapter. Although fictional and set in the Victorian era, the mystery series I'm reading actually describes the poverty and urban slums many people lived in. (Inspector Ben Ross/Lizzie Martin mysteries.) In comparison, Jane Austen's Regency novels do not portray the horrors of how many people lived. If they did, I wonder if her books would be as popular. 1y
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suvata This chapter was a rough one for sure. But then I was thinking how even today, in American cities, there are beautiful cities surrounded by slums. What really shocked me was the description of the farmlands. All the books and all the movies make it look so peaceful and beautiful, I used to think I could live there but, I‘m not so sure now that I‘ve heard some of the inside scoop. This is a great book so far. 1y
Bklover This chapter was quite an experience. I imagine they had a high death rate, but I can‘t believe anyone at all survived that! 1y
melissajayne A really eye opening chapter, not only what was described about Liverpool (considering the conditions in Victorian Britain, I‘m not exactly shocked), but also the description of the growth that these cities went through in a short period of time; it‘s no wonder why Lydia Benett wanted to go to Brighton 😉 1y
Birdsong28 Yes everything has been sugar coated so Regency Britain looked a wonderful place to want to travel back to but the reality was so far from that. I live in Britain and there were slums till about the 1960's. Currently we are facing a similar situation as there are alot of Landlords letting ppl live in mould/damp or both infested places. I have visited a back to back housing like it described in Birmingham. 1y
julieclair I kept thinking about my ancestors as I read this chapter. They were millworkers and weavers near Manchester. They were quite poor, I believe, and I wondered if they lived in some of these horrible conditions. 😢 A very sad and eye-opening chapter. And the story about the 100-year-old woman being evicted during the Clearances in Scotland. Unbelievable. So heartless and cruel. 1y
CoffeeNBooks Wow- I think on some level I knew conditions weren't great, but I never really envisioned it quite so bad. That was quite an intense chapter. I did, however, really like learning that living right on the water didn't used to be desirable and fancy- that was really interesting to me. @Ann_Reads - I agree about Jane Austen's novels. 1y
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StayCurious
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#Pemberlittens I‘m so happy to start reading what I hope will be an interesting foray into the time of Jane‘ Austen. It was a good introduction- I like his writing style so far. It‘s not overly stuffy. I‘m looking forward to the different chapters, specifically hygiene and medicine. I‘m sad that the vicar was basically told to fill out his paperwork a certain way, and we lost out on some important history because of it.

IndoorDame I‘m surprised by how exciting I found the introduction! Totally agree about his writing style! And the vicar ☹️. And it never occurred to me before that something like standardizing the width of screw threads could have led to the entire age of manufacturing. I‘m hoping I may be in for a lot of similar unexpected revelations. 1y
AnnR I also liked the introductory chapter. Some of the topics will be eye openers, although I'm expecting a huge dichotomy between how the rich and poor lived. 1y
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CoffeeNBooks I'm so bummed- this isn't available in any format from my library. I was looking forward to reading it.😕 1y
StayCurious @CoffeeNBooks darn! I‘ll take you off the tag list 🙁 1y
suvata The introduction was great. I didn‘t realize there was a such a stark difference between the Regency and Victorian periods. Quote: “This shift, from effusive individualism to government-imposed standardisation, is indicative of wider changes. For many people in the 1860s the Regency seemed like the last age of true freedom before the regulation of society started in earnest.” (edited) 1y
CoffeeNBooks @StayCurious Don't worry about it- I'll still enjoy seeing everyone's comments about it. 😀 1y
SamAnne Can't wait to start this one this week-end. Looks fascinating. 1y
Bluebird Please add me to the list. I just got a copy of the book 😄. @CoffeeNBooks do you have access to Hoopla? I couldn‘t find the book at any of my libraries, but then found it there. 1y
julieclair I am amazed at how much I learned just from the introduction! This is going to be such an interesting read. 1y
CoffeeNBooks @Bluebird I looked, but couldn't find it there, either. I'm not very familiar with Hoopla, though, so maybe I'll look again. 1y
Bluebird @CoffeeNBooks It‘s new for me too. Several of my libraries have an affiliation with Hoopla and I was able to log in using my library card. I was shocked they had this book! I use 4 different libraries—and none of them own the book. (I logged into Hoopla using the card from my largest library—not sure if it makes a difference). 1y
Bklover @CoffeeNBooks I got mine on hoopla too. I don‘t believe all hooplas are the same though, as ours usually doesn‘t have anything I‘m look for. 1y
DebinHawaii I am picking up a print copy from my library this weekend and will catch up then. 🤗 1y
CoffeeNBooks I really like how this introduction is written- it seems like a very welcoming start to what sounds like a very interesting book! 1y
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BarkingMadRead
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StayCurious Great picture! 1y
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LitsyEvents
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Hey #Pemberlittens! We‘re going to start reading this book on February 1 as it won a large majority of the vote - I‘m interested in this one for sure! I will be doing a chapter a day, starting with the introduction. Please let her know if you want to be tagged in @StayCurious daily posts.

@Barkingmadread

suvata I just got the book so please add me to the discussion list. Thanks for hosting this. 1y
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StayCurious
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Hey #Pemberlittens! We‘re going to start reading this book on February 1 as it won a large majority of the vote - I‘m interested in this one for sure! I will be doing a chapter a day, starting with the introduction. Please let me know if you want to be tagged in my daily posts.

MoonWitch94 Awesome! Count me in 🥳 1y
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CoffeeNBooks Keep me on the tag list please! I'm looking forward to this one! 1y
DebinHawaii Yes, please. I just put it on hold at the library. 🤗 1y
BarkingMadRead Woohoo! Can‘t wait! 1y
Ruthiella I‘m in. Just put it on hold at the library! 👍 1y
Librarybelle Yes! I‘ll look for a copy! 1y
AnnR Please tag me, as well. Thank you. 🙂 The ebook and audio is available through my library/HOOPLA, so I will try to fit it in. 1y
IndoorDame Count me in! Just requested a copy of this from the library 😊 1y
rubyslippersreads Just found it on Hoopla. Please tag me. I think this pairs perfectly with our other book (which I‘m woefully behind on) 1y
inthegreensandblues Please tag me too. I've been wanting to read one of these Time Traveler's Guides for a long time. 😄 1y
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! Looking forward to it!! 1y
SamAnne Looking forward to it! 1y
Chrissyreadit I want to try 1y
Bklover I found it at the library so count me in! 1y
Aimeesue Yes please! 1y
Crinoline_Laphroaig Yes Please! 1y
melissajayne Count me in. 1y
ravenlee I think I‘m out for this one. Enjoy! 1y
eeclayton I think I'll sit this one out, thanks. 1y
PageShifter You can tag me, even though I am a bit unsure if I can get this 1y
peanutnine I think I'll sit out this month, thanks 🙂 1y
Birdsong28 Can I join in? @StayCurious 😊📚📖 1y
StayCurious @Birdsong28 absolutely! 1y
julieclair Yes, please! 😃 1y
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