What else? A collection of Margaret Atwood's essays called Curious Pursuits, and David Horspool's The English Rebel: One Thousand Years of Troublemaking from the Normans to the Nineties. It looks like a slightly more conservative companion to Vallance's A Radical History of Britain. I love this stuff because despite the many evils perpetrated by English and then British imperialism, the British are also recalcitrant bunch who don't want to be pushed around. You decapitated a king before the French and staged numerous other revolts from the Peasants to the Poll Tax. Revive that tradition!
I also received a replacement Danish Literature Tree and Renaissance Tree posters - very beautiful.
4 comments:
Good God, I thought the lady and I did well with our purchases earlier this afternoon in my village bookshop. In your absence I have taken a shine to William Hogarth's illustrations and life hence my blog details the comprehenshive study I've begun. Hopefully you had an enjoyable time on your travels.
Cohn's book is a gem. You really need it in an early 1970s Picador edition to appreciate its true context of consumption though.
Was just glancing over as I usually do when you post about book purchases as most of the time I don't even understand the titles but there's actually something I recognise there - I enjoy Margaret Atwood though not her essays I confess. Even so I feel clever!
Atwood's one of my favourites, and I do read a lot of stuff for pure relaxation: SF, Kate Atkinson, Philips Pullman and Reeve, Alan Garner. I'm not a book snob, though I'd happily burn Archer (instead of his books).
OK, I am a book snob, but I don't just read theory. What else are you reading?
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