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[ HOW ENGLAND MADE THE ENGLISH FROM WHY WE DRIVE ON THE LEFT TO WHY WE DON'T TALK TO OUR NEIGHBOURS BY MOUNT, HARRY](AUTHOR)HARDBACK

par Harry Mount

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1195231,284 (3.69)4
Join Harry Mount on his journey through England as he uncovers the national characteristics behind the English look - a liking for old things, for smallness and gentleness; a taste for the picturesque and the slightly shabby; a preference for accidental, natural beauty over grand human designs. The book explains how the size of the fields is produced by male inheritance laws and the erratic ways of the rambling English hedge; how the industrial revolution created the modern English waistline; and why the Midlands became the home of the British curry. It identifies the materials that made England, too, like the faint pink Aberdeen granite of the kerbstones; and that precise English mix of air temperature, smell and light that hits you the moment you touch down at Heathrow. This book spans new England, as well as the rolling hills and patchwork landscape of Tourist Board England- the hedge-funder's taste for Victorian terraced houses turned into minimalist white boxes; and the steel-reinforced concrete that changed the English city horizon. England and the English have been shaped by our weather, geology and geography; by being a coal-rich, northerly island off the edge of a vast land mass, moored between the Atlantic and the North Sea and warmed by the Gulf Stream. Because of all these things, we drink too much, we're bad at speaking foreign languages and we're shy - particularly with the opposite sex. But they also mean we're good at defending ourselves, fascinated by nature and gardens, obsessed with walking, indifferent to comfort, and determined to preserve the past. The most geologically-varied small country in the world has produced its most idiosyncratic people; and the English character and the landscape of that small country are inextricably linked.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 4 mentions

5 sur 5
A fascinating and illuminating book: far more interesting and thoughtful than its subtitle suggests. 'From why we drive on the left to why we don't talk to our neighbours' doesn't cover it at all.

Mount begins by examining the England's geology, and shows how its great variety has begun to shape its economic activity. He moves on to the soil, our waterways, our towns, landowning history, gardens, industry..... He's full of information and most interesting facts which he dispenses with a light touch. His enthusiasm fostered my enthusiasm. This is an engaging and often amusing book, from which I learnt a great deal ( )
  Margaret09 | Apr 15, 2024 |
A book which reveals interesting facts on almost every page about our social and industrial history, liberally sprinkled with concrete examples to illustrate the insights revealed. A shame that some of the illustrations are difficult to read, but this may be the fault of the source. ( )
  edwardsgt | Mar 21, 2022 |
The English landscape is unlike any other country around the world, from the patchwork fields, to the geology beneath our feet. We have an amazing diversity, from salt marches to soaring cliffs, sandy beaches to the stunning Jurassic coast.

In this book Mount looks at the interaction between the English landscape, and the English psyche, and how the land and place in the world that we inhabit has influenced us as much as we have influenced it. He breaks this down into four categories, geography, weather, geology and history. Each chapter in the book covers an aspect one of these elements and considers just how the place where someone lives is defined by the soils, the rock and by water.

It is a informative book, and does make for interesting reading. Towards the end of the book the focus drops a little and the solid links that were there in the beginning become more tenuous towards the end.
( )
  PDCRead | Apr 6, 2020 |
I found the book a bit tedious, mostly due to a surfeit of information. It comes at you off the pages like a fire hose, and you just get soaked in it. It makes you numb. Taken in small chunks, you are able to pick out occasional gems, but then the book takes rather too long to get though. Fortunately it improves towards the end, so your final impression is possibly better than it may otherwise have been. (Or maybe I was just glad to finish!) One for your dad... ( )
  jvgravy | Jan 10, 2014 |
Just one of those books that I saw whilst browsing in my local bookshop, and bought (almost) on impulse
  corracreigh | Jan 4, 2016 |
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Join Harry Mount on his journey through England as he uncovers the national characteristics behind the English look - a liking for old things, for smallness and gentleness; a taste for the picturesque and the slightly shabby; a preference for accidental, natural beauty over grand human designs. The book explains how the size of the fields is produced by male inheritance laws and the erratic ways of the rambling English hedge; how the industrial revolution created the modern English waistline; and why the Midlands became the home of the British curry. It identifies the materials that made England, too, like the faint pink Aberdeen granite of the kerbstones; and that precise English mix of air temperature, smell and light that hits you the moment you touch down at Heathrow. This book spans new England, as well as the rolling hills and patchwork landscape of Tourist Board England- the hedge-funder's taste for Victorian terraced houses turned into minimalist white boxes; and the steel-reinforced concrete that changed the English city horizon. England and the English have been shaped by our weather, geology and geography; by being a coal-rich, northerly island off the edge of a vast land mass, moored between the Atlantic and the North Sea and warmed by the Gulf Stream. Because of all these things, we drink too much, we're bad at speaking foreign languages and we're shy - particularly with the opposite sex. But they also mean we're good at defending ourselves, fascinated by nature and gardens, obsessed with walking, indifferent to comfort, and determined to preserve the past. The most geologically-varied small country in the world has produced its most idiosyncratic people; and the English character and the landscape of that small country are inextricably linked.

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