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At Home: A Short History of Private Life Hardcover | Pages: 497 pages
Rating: 3.97 | 75927 Users | 6107 Reviews

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Original Title: At Home: A Short History of Private Life
ISBN: 0767919386 (ISBN13: 9780767919388)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Lon Don, Thomas John Gordon Marsham, Mrs Anna Maria Thornton, Louisa Beckford, Edward Townsend Stotesbury, George Templeton Strong, Maria Clutterbuck, James Henry Atkinson, Oliver Belmont, David Clark, Harriet Taylor, Ranald Michie, Henry Dreyfuss, Jonathan Franklin, Merlin D. Tuttle, Daniel Edwards, Cyriacus Ahlers, Thomas A. Watson, Sebastiano Serlio, J. Sterling Morton, Liza Picard, Hannah Cullwick, François Lallemand, Johann Philipp Reis, Pitt Rivers, R. E. Crompton, Joseph Aspdin, George Bayldon, Pasqua Rosee, Charles A. R. Campbell, Arthur Munby, Joseph Bazalgette, Isaac Ware, Brian Ayers, John Landis Mason, Richard Morris Hunt, Gordon Childe, Antony Dale, Dr. Richard Russell, Hermann Sprengel, E. V. McCollum, Carol Heaton, Robert Kerr, Philip Henry Gosse, Alfred Lord Tennyson, William G. Blauvelt, Dennis Pogue, William Greenwell, John Fraser, Addison Mizner, Elias Howe, William Grove, Emily Cockayne, Ötzi, Bryan Donkin, Hamish Hamilton, Lords Carlisle, Alice Vanderbilt, Nicolas-François Appert, Annie Kaplan, Josiah Wedgwood III, King George IV, Joseph Swan, Judith Flanders, Isabella Beeton, Stratton Strawless, George Neville, Frederick Charrington, Humphry Clinker, Calvert Vaux, David Macpherson, E. L. Drake, William Beckford, Baker Brown, Samuel Rogers, Silbury Hill, John Vanbrugh, Daniel Pincot, Eleanor Stanley, Edmund Cartwright, Sutton Courtenay, Peter Willis, John Claudius Loudon, Henry Cartwright, Mary Mercer, James M. Clinton, Gardiner Hubbard, Jane Sotworth, Mark Girouard, Frank Buckland, James Barclay, Feargus O'Connor, Jane Grenville, Edward Tull, Susan Stein, George Pitt, Matthew Digby Wyatt, James Hargreaves, Witold Rybczynski, Eleanor Coade, Juliet Gardiner, Andrew Mellon, J. Alfred Gotch, Thomas Barnardo, Jane Webb, Robert Smythson, Edwin Chadwick, Vere Gordon Childe, Dr George C. Menzies, Henry Cavendish, Edmund Antrobus, Puloroon, Frédéric Bartholdi, Frederick Hale Holmes, Eva Stotesbury, Charles Wentworth Dilke, George S. Rasmussen, Wilson Mizner, Nancy Jones, Lord Scarborough, Simon Jenkins, William K. Vanderbilt, Elizabeth Wayland Barber, Blanchard Jerrold, Skara Brae, Baron Walsingham, John Harington, Commodore Vanderbilt, Robert Marsham, Nathaniel Wyeth, James Mellaart, Duke of Marlborough, Dr Charles P. Gerba, Abraham Gesner, Giovanni Aldini, Edwin Drake, John Farquhar, Thomas Drummond, Aston Clinton, Uriah Phillips Levy, James Woodforde, Cyrus McCormick, John Michell, John Bennet Lawes, Duc de Malakoff, Caroline of Anspach, Robert Fortune, A. Graham Bell, Earl of Carlisle, Casimir Funk, Emma Wedgwood, Duke of Devonshire, Mr. Stotesbury, Orson Fowler, Peter Laslett, Ami Argand, Lord Burlington, Bob Self, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, Effie Ruskin, Charlotte Wedgwood, John Frere, Charles Langton, Friedrich Hoffmann, George Peabody, John Harden, Heinrich Hoffmann, John A. Templer, Karl Scheele, Lon Don, Thomas John Gordon Marsham, Mrs Anna Maria Thornton, Robert Southey, Louisa Beckford, Edward Townsend Stotesbury, George Templeton Strong, Maria Clutterbuck, James Henry Atkinson, Oliver Belmont, George Bissell, Lancelot Brown, David Clark, Harriet Taylor, Ranald Michie, Henry Dreyfuss, Jonathan Franklin, Merlin D. Tuttle, Daniel Edwards, Cyriacus Ahlers, Thomas A. Watson, Sebastiano Serlio, J. Sterling Morton, Thomas Bayes, Liza Picard, Hannah Cullwick, François Lallemand, Johann Philipp Reis, Pitt Rivers, R. E. Crompton, Joseph Aspdin, George Bayldon, Pasqua Rosee, Charles A. R. Campbell, Arthur Munby, Joseph Bazalgette, Isaac Ware, Brian Ayers, John Landis Mason, Richard Morris Hunt, Gordon Childe, Antony Dale, Dr. Richard Russell, Hermann Sprengel, E. V. McCollum, Carol Heaton, Robert Kerr, Philip Henry Gosse, Alfred Lord Tennyson, William G. Blauvelt, Dennis Pogue, William Greenwell, John Fraser, Addison Mizner, Elias Howe, William Grove, Emily Cockayne, Ötzi, Bryan Donkin, Hamish Hamilton, Lords Carlisle, Alice Vanderbilt, Nicolas-François Appert, Thomas Crapper, Annie Kaplan, Josiah Wedgwood III, King George IV, Joseph Swan, Judith Flanders, Isabella Beeton, Stratton Strawless, George Neville, Humphry Clinker, Calvert Vaux, David Macpherson, E. L. Drake, William Beckford, Baker Brown, Samuel Rogers, Silbury Hill, John Vanbrugh, Daniel Pincot, Eleanor Stanley, Edmund Cartwright, Sutton Courtenay, Peter Willis, John Claudius Loudon, Henry Cartwright, Mary Mercer, James M. Clinton, Gardiner Hubbard, Jane Sotworth, Mark Girouard, Frank Buckland, James Barclay, Feargus O'Connor, Edmond Halley, Jane Grenville, Edward Tull, Susan Stein, George Pitt, Matthew Digby Wyatt, James Hargreaves, Witold Rybczynski, Eleanor Coade, Juliet Gardiner, Andrew Mellon, J. Alfred Gotch, Thomas Barnardo, Jane Webb, Robert Smythson, Edwin Chadwick, Vere Gordon Childe, Dr George C. Menzies, Henry Cavendish, Edmund Antrobus, Puloroon, Frédéric Bartholdi, Eva Stotesbury, Charles Wentworth Dilke, George S. Rasmussen, Richard Arkwright, Wilson Mizner, Nancy Jones, Lord Scarborough, Simon Jenkins, William K. Vanderbilt, Elizabeth Wayland Barber, Blanchard Jerrold, Skara Brae, Baron Walsingham, John Harington, Commodore Vanderbilt, Robert Marsham, Nathaniel Wyeth, James Mellaart, Duke of Marlborough, Dr Charles P. Gerba, Abraham Gesner, Giovanni Aldini, Aston Clinton, Cyrus McCormick, Frederick Law Olmsted
Literary Awards: Goodreads Choice Award Nominee for History and Biography (2010)

Interpretation Concering Books At Home: A Short History of Private Life

“Houses aren’t refuges from history. They are where history ends up.”

Bill Bryson and his family live in a Victorian parsonage in a part of England where nothing of any great significance has happened since the Romans decamped. Yet one day, he began to consider how very little he knew about the ordinary things of life as he found it in that comfortable home. To remedy this, he formed the idea of journeying about his house from room to room to “write a history of the world without leaving home.” The bathroom provides the occasion for a history of hygiene; the bedroom, sex, death, and sleep; the kitchen, nutrition and the spice trade; and so on, as Bryson shows how each has figured in the evolution of private life. Whatever happens in the world, he demonstrates, ends up in our house, in the paint and the pipes and the pillows and every item of furniture.
(front flap)

Details Based On Books At Home: A Short History of Private Life

Title:At Home: A Short History of Private Life
Author:Bill Bryson
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:First U.S. Edition
Pages:Pages: 497 pages
Published:October 5th 2010 by Doubleday (first published May 27th 2010)
Categories:Nonfiction. History. Audiobook. Humor

Rating Based On Books At Home: A Short History of Private Life
Ratings: 3.97 From 75927 Users | 6107 Reviews

Judgment Based On Books At Home: A Short History of Private Life
Tremendously interesting history book for people with ADD and butterfly minds. It's as if someone had taken an encyclopedia and very cleverly joined all the entries so it looked like a proper book. Oh, it was a proper book! Well then, very clever.

I have a brain crush on Bill Bryson. I find his books entertaining, insightful and delightfully humorous. "At Home" did not disappoint, giving a fascinating, rambling, Everything-But-the-Kitchen-Sink view of world history.The book is structured into chapters based on the different parts of a house, such as the kitchen, the drawing room, the cellar, the bedroom, etc. In the introduction, Bryson explains that he and his wife moved into a former church rectory in a village in eastern England, and

This is pretty fascinating and I generally like Bill Bryson, but the book is heavily concentrated on the fascinating discoveries/inventions/accomplishments of men. Women are only mentioned for the silly things they did as the wives of these men or for writing silly books Bryson describes as "unreadable then and probably unreadable now." Apparently in all his exhaustive research on the history of private life, Bryson found no significant contributions by women.

"If you had to summarise it in one sentence, the history of domestic life is the history of getting comfortable slowly."Whew... Ladies and gentlemen, I have spent an exhausting yet exhilarating ten days with Bill Bryson at his Norfolk home. When he invited me to take a look at this former Church of England rectory, I hardly expected spend more than an afternoon there - a spot of tea, maybe a couple of beers in the evening, along with the promised tour of the house. But I got much more than I

A fun and mind expanding tour of Anglo-American cultural history structured loosely around the rooms of his Victorian rectors house in village in Norfolk, England. If you have experienced the pleasures of some of his travel books, you will recognize his method of using an experience in the present as a launching pad for circles of digression down many fascinating paths before returning with amazing insights into the curious behaviors and marvelous accomplishments of human creativity. It all

The book is well written and I enjoyed it, but it's a little disjointed and the subtitle is misleading. It's not about the history of private life, of how people lived, but a history of the materials that make up the house and the general way certain society in general viewed varying aspects of domesticity. Very little of the idea of private life (how the concept started, flourished and became what it is today) is touched upon. Still, this is a good book with interesting historical details and

I really love Bill Bryson...entertaining, enlightening, and an all around good read. I'm now driving my wife crazy by bringing up little "tid-bit" facts that I learned from this book. Full review shortly but I wanted to at least move this off my "reading" to the "done" state.