Front cover image for London : the biography

London : the biography

"London is perhaps the most important study of the city ever written, and confirms Ackroyd's status as what one critic has called "our age's greatest London imagination. Much of Peter Ackroyd's work has been concerned with the life and past of London but this new work is his definitive account of the city. For Ackroyd, London is a living organism, with its own laws of growth and change, thus the subtitle A Biography (as opposed to A History). The book differs too, from histories, in the range and diversity of its contents. Ackroyd portrays London from the time of the Druids to the beginning of the twenty-first century, noting magnificence in both epochs, but this is not a simple chronological record. There are chapters on the history of silence and the history of light, the history of childhood and the history of suicide, the history of Cockney speech and the history of drink. London is fully comprehensive, animated by Ackroyd's concern for the close relationship between the present and the past. He describes the peculiar "echoic" quality of London whereby its texture and history actively affect the lives and personalities of its citizens. All of Ackroyd's writing has been strongly linked with London - from novels such as Hawksmoor and The Plato Papers through his biographies of what he calls his "great Cockney visionaries": Dickens, Blake and Thomas More. Now, at last, his obsession with London takes centre-stage."
Print Book, English, 2000
Chatto & Windus, London, 2000
History
xxiii, 822 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
9781856197168, 1856197166
45325918
The city as body
From prehistory to 1066
The Early Middle Ages
London contrasts
The late medieval city
Onward and upward
Trading streets and trading parishes
A London neighbourhood
London as theatre
Pestilence and flame
After the Fire
Crime and punishment
Voracious London
London as crowd
The natural history of London
Night and day
London's radicals
Violent London
Black magic, white magic
A fever of building
London's rivers
Under the ground
Victorian megalopolis
London's outcasts
Women and children
Continuities
East and south
The centre of empire
After the Great War
Blitz
Refashioning the city
Cockney visionaries