Rating: Summary: I'd give it ten stars if I could! Review: Here is your ultimate Regency reference book! If you write in this period, or just love English history, this is the book for you! Great facts, well organized and a terrific read! I use this book every day!
Rating: Summary: If you Love 19th Century English Literature, Get This Book! Review: I certainly wish that I had this book before I started reading Jane Austen, because it would have answered many of my questions. I had tried to use the dictionary and was not always successful. Daniel Pool's excellent book changed all of that! Have you ever wondered why Fanny Price was so dizzy after drinking NEGUS? What exactly was the difference between a GIG and a CURRICLE? Where in the Order of Precedence did Sir William Lucas fall as a BARONET? It is all here in this thoroughly engaging and delightful book. It is here that I finally learned about the daily life of 19th-century England, and the overall social structure of the time. Jane Austen is not the only author covered: Charles Dickens, George Eliot, The Brontes, Thomas Hardy, and Anthony Trollope are well discussed. The glossery is excellent, and full of terms that I could not find even when I used The Oxford Dictionary. The only area that needed further clarification was the chapter about Entails and Protecting The Estate. I never quite understood how Miss Ann De Bourgh was able to inherit her father's estate upon his death, since "A girl should not inherit because if she remained single the line could die out and if she married the estate would pass in possession to someone outside the family." (see pg. 90 hardcover edition) Apart from that, I still feel comfortable giving this book 5 stars, and would advise anyone who loves 19th-century English Literature to add it to their collection. It is a great reference guide of the period.
Rating: Summary: A gem! Review: I had first read this thoroughly enjoyable book in 1993, and ever since I cannot help going back to it again and again.
Rating: Summary: This book is a wonderful reference tool... Review: I have owned this book for years, and use it constantly in my writing. I recently saw it on a friend's wish list and had to comment. Along the lines of the Writer's Digest series "Everyday Life In The..", "What Jane Austen Ate..." is a wonderful explanation of many things Regency: the social Season, the rules of whist, and everything in between. I highly recommend this book to writers, history buffs, romance lovers and anyone who is the least bit interested in the social graces of the British early 1800's.
Rating: Summary: Feel for Olde England Review: I just want to say that I really liked this book. It gives a really good feel for the time. It explains every part of life during the 1800s, for all the classes. A great referece book but also a fun read.
Rating: Summary: Way better than "Everyday Life..." Review: I picked this book up after reading _Everyday Life In Regency and Victorian England_, which I thought did a decent job of describing the mundane details of English life in the 1800's. Daniel Pool's book is immensely more interesting, detailed, and enjoyable._What Jane Austen Ate..._ is divided into two parts: a series of essays on daily life in the 19th century, and an exhaustive glossary of words common to the folk of the period, but not to us. Both parts are engaging and interesting, suggesting all sorts of interesting ideas for characters, scenes, plots, and schemes (Most people will read this for background on other works, but I read it to ensure historical accuracy in something I'm working on). Pool refers to classical works by Dickens, Austen and Eliot when describing a certain facet of life to help pull it all together. This book gets 5 stars not because it's the greatest book in the world, but because it's clearly the best of its kind. Readers and writers of 19th century fiction would do well to read it.
Rating: Summary: A great book ! Review: I really enjoyed this book! It has a chaper devoted to many subjects. It talk about the 19th century England. I highly recommend it for anyone interested in Charles Dickens and Jane Austen or 19th century England in general.
Rating: Summary: oh so interesting. Review: i suppose it takes someone interested in the content of this book to love it, but anyone can find it very interesting. i consider it a great resource, but also sometimes just pick it up to read a section at a time. it is amazing how much is known about the days and times of the writers of many of our classics. and it is intrigueing to delve into any other culture in that way. a great book to own and to love.
Rating: Summary: This book is worth every penny Review: If you enjoy reading Victorian-era books, or watching movies based on them, you will love this book. It's easy to read and understand, and you will get so much more out of the books from this period (or the movies based on them). A fun read.
Rating: Summary: Wonderful Book on 19th century Social History Review: If you love to read historical novels, whether they be the classics of Charles Dickens, Jane Austen, the Bronte sisters and Anthony Trollope, or historical romances by such authors as Judith McNaught and Julia Quinn, this is a great book for you. It will also appeal to history buffs, and those with just a passing interest in the social customs and etiquette of bygone days. Accessible and covering a broad range of topics, it's a reference book that touches on everything from social hierarchy (an Earl outranks the eldest son of a Marquis who outranks the younger son of a Duke, the eldest son of a Duke, however, ranks above an Earl and just below a Marquis), how to name your estate (what is the difference between a hall, a manor and a house?), how to play Faro (you need a machine to deal), manage the servants (especially when they're just not getting the silver bright enough) and walk with a member of the opposite sex (a gentleman, remember, always walks on the side nearest the street). The book also includes an extensive glossary of terms of the period (just what is a costermonger and a mantua-maker?) It is also filled with literary references and citations from the great British 19th-century authors, including those mentioned above. Don't worry if you haven't read any of the books, the references are used to illustrate points, though this book may inspire you to finally pick up a few of those classics you've always been meaning to read. My one complaint about this book is that it's just not as thorough as I would have liked. It covers a wide range of topics, and in trying to keep the book readable, it only touches the surface rather than becoming deeply involved in any one topic. As an overall reference book, it's very good, and is very useful to anyone who might be writing a novel set in this period, or just enjoys reading books set in 19th-century England. The closest book I am aware of to this book is "The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in Regency and Victorian England" by Kristine Hughes, which follows in the same general reference covering a lot of topics, but without the references to classic novels. Also, the recent "An Elegant Madness: High Society in Regency England" by Venetia Murray is a collection of accounts of some of the most notorious real people of the era. And for the literary angle, "A Dab of Dickens and a Touch of Twain" by Elliot Engel offers a biographical overview of many of the authors referred to in this book.
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