Tuesday, 23 February 2021

Book Review: At Home



Anchor Canada, 2011

By Bill Bryson


L’s latest read is a book by one her favorite authors, Bill Bryson. Bryson is a well-known British/American nonfiction author. Published in 2010, At Home: A Short History of Private Life is an interesting look at the history of home life, and a fitting read almost one full year into the global pandemic experience here in Canada since “home” is exactly where we’ve been! Having purchased a home that was once a rectory in Norfolk, England, Bryson goes room by room through his house using each room as a starting point to delve into the interesting history of the home. And with Bryson, you never know where you will end up.

Some topics include:

Victorian sex (the bedroom), the invention of cement (the cellar), child labour (the nursery), clothing and fashion (the dressing room), and the history of personal hygiene (the bathroom). The chapter on the bathroom is not for the faint of heart. L says some of the history is really gross!

Being a history lover, I think L really enjoyed reading this book. She kept disturbing my naps with lots of “Did you know” facts such as:

…. in the Victorian era a typical middle class British family could burn a ton of coal a month.

….two amorous mice could theoretically produce a million descendants in a year!

….furniture makers such as Chippendale entirely used up a type of mahogany found only in parts of Cuba and Hispaniola in only fifty years. The tree is now extinct.

….linen was soaked in stale urine or poultry dung for its’ whitening effect.

….in the mid 1800s, a woman could typically wear up to forty pounds of clothing.

….children as young as six years old were put to work in mines, working naked because of the heat and to save their clothes.

And on and on! I lost many quality nap hours to this book.

Bryson is an entertaining, knowledgeable writer who obviously did a lot of research preparing for this book. He makes learning history fun!

L’s verdict: I really enjoyed this book. I feel much smarter since I finished reading it and I’m anxiously awaiting the day it is safe to have dinner parties again so I can share all the interesting facts I know now!

Bingley’s verdict: My dog brain is now full of useless human knowledge passed on by L, which is fine, but where is the chapter on the dog house?

Rating: 4/5




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