In the England of novelist Jane Austen (1775–1817), the cost of postage was paid by the recipient of a letter—not the sender; almanacs sold well owing to the details they contained on when the moon would rise and set—important information for anyone traveling at night; and rhubarb "dried and powdered" was a popular home remedy for ailments ranging from earache to congestion. In this comprehensive book, coauthors Roy and Lesley Adkins (
Nelson's Trafalgar: The Battle That Changed the World) discuss how people lived in England two centuries ago; their narrative describes daily life—marriage, birth, work, religion, entertainment, travel, illness, and death—for the different classes of English people. Through meticulous examination of diaries and letters, travelogs, journals, and newspapers as well as histories and local records, the authors document the accepted beliefs, common practices, and everyday activities of Austen's time.
VERDICT This well-documented text is easily accessible and includes lengthy quotations from primary sources and numerous references to Austen's novels and letters that highlight the middle- and upper-class society she knew best. An excellent resource for Austen devotees interested in rich details of late 18th- and early 19th-century English life.
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