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katie_michener's review
4.0
Very interesting historical recap of American and English life in the mid 1800s through the early 1900s. Typically of marriages, scandal, parties, and social expectations of the time period. Lots of detail so easy to forget names but interesting none the less!
bneenos's review against another edition
4.0
I kind of thought this was non-fiction lite. It shares short narrative type accounts of the Buccaneers and is a great introduction to this period of history, and it's entertaining and informative, even if by the end I thought it was a bit shallow history wise. In any case, this book was excellent medicine for my Downton Abbey cravings and I'm excited to start looking through the works cited for a bit more meaty offerings.
crayolabird's review against another edition
4.0
The subtitle of this book is: Tales of Wealth and Marriage, Sex and Snobbery and there is another blurb on the front that says An Inspiration for the Popular Television Series Downton Abbey. Truth: this last bit is why I read the book :)
I love Downton Abbey. I don't care that it's all drama and soap opera happenings. I love the historical period, I love the things I'm learning and the way the show makes me think. As a regular follower of the show, I will say that this book gave me so much insight!! Actual things that I wondered about during different episodes were made clear. BUT, if you do NOT watch Downton, I need to tell you that it doesn't matter - since this was written beforehand and has nothing to actually do with the show itself :)
This book is a social history - a look at a very newly wealthy class of Americans at the end of the 19th century who, unable to find a spot for themselves among the old money in New York, chose to look for social status in England. American Heiresses found titled husbands and those husbands found a crazy pot of money to help with the upkeep of their estates in an age when a title did NOT equal wealth. Soon it wasn't just new money looking abroad either, a love of all things British created a wave of blended American/English families. Winston Churchill himself is the result of one of these unions!
I loved learning about the social codes of the time as well as how challenging it was for these women to make a place for themselves in English society. Really, it is a history of the rich at the time - the authors make no qualms about focusing on that small and specific group of people. We learn a little bit about "downstairs," but only in how they interacted with the upstairs, not their own way of life, per se, which is obviously very different. We become acquainted with the finest dress makers, how one goes about hosting the King at one's home, how to throw a lavish wedding at the turn of the century and how to go about having an affair in a socially acceptable way.
My only qualm is that the layout and formatting sometimes made it hard to enjoy the overall text. There were so many page or two-page small sections on specific topics that stopping to read those (because I was interested in it all!) made me loose the flow of the main narrative. It didn't spoil the book for me, but I did notice it. There are a LOT of names to keep track of but there is a brilliant index in the back to help keep people straight. There is also a ton of photographs, which really helped me to image the lavishness of the time period.
I now have to pass this little treasure along to my fellow Downton lovers :)
I love Downton Abbey. I don't care that it's all drama and soap opera happenings. I love the historical period, I love the things I'm learning and the way the show makes me think. As a regular follower of the show, I will say that this book gave me so much insight!! Actual things that I wondered about during different episodes were made clear. BUT, if you do NOT watch Downton, I need to tell you that it doesn't matter - since this was written beforehand and has nothing to actually do with the show itself :)
This book is a social history - a look at a very newly wealthy class of Americans at the end of the 19th century who, unable to find a spot for themselves among the old money in New York, chose to look for social status in England. American Heiresses found titled husbands and those husbands found a crazy pot of money to help with the upkeep of their estates in an age when a title did NOT equal wealth. Soon it wasn't just new money looking abroad either, a love of all things British created a wave of blended American/English families. Winston Churchill himself is the result of one of these unions!
I loved learning about the social codes of the time as well as how challenging it was for these women to make a place for themselves in English society. Really, it is a history of the rich at the time - the authors make no qualms about focusing on that small and specific group of people. We learn a little bit about "downstairs," but only in how they interacted with the upstairs, not their own way of life, per se, which is obviously very different. We become acquainted with the finest dress makers, how one goes about hosting the King at one's home, how to throw a lavish wedding at the turn of the century and how to go about having an affair in a socially acceptable way.
My only qualm is that the layout and formatting sometimes made it hard to enjoy the overall text. There were so many page or two-page small sections on specific topics that stopping to read those (because I was interested in it all!) made me loose the flow of the main narrative. It didn't spoil the book for me, but I did notice it. There are a LOT of names to keep track of but there is a brilliant index in the back to help keep people straight. There is also a ton of photographs, which really helped me to image the lavishness of the time period.
I now have to pass this little treasure along to my fellow Downton lovers :)
readingorangejane's review
3.0
Interesting social history. Light reading. Got repetitive after a while.
ar2chn30713's review against another edition
3.0
Interesting with lots of pictures. At times it reads like a textbook, you have a lot of little vignettes scattered throughout which makes reading it straight through a little difficult. But it's very well done as a reference text for the upper classes of the late Victorian/Edwardian eras.
rebeccakb's review against another edition
3.0
A varies and fun read full of sidebars, fun facts and history of the impact of American heiresses marrying into the British aristocracy.
kaydondino's review against another edition
2.0
The info was interesting and well researched but the format is the worst! The text is frequently broken by pictures, diagrams, off-set text, and a whole host of other sins that makes this book especially hard to read. I just set it down but I'm not sure I can remember even a bit of what I read because my eyes and brain were being constantly made to jump around.
melissa_k_reads's review against another edition
5.0
What a fabulously easy-to-read way of finding out how life was for some people in the early 1900s. This is a well-laid out book. Lots of name dropping, as expected. I enjoyed every minute of it.
shannoncary's review
3.0
Fascinating history of American women who went to England to marry nobility at the turn of the century. You will love this if you are into Downton Abbey. I only gave it 3 stars because a big chunk of the book is just a catalog of couple and houses. This stuff is much more interesting in narrative form.