Please note: In order to keep Hive up to date and provide users with the best features, we are no longer able to fully support Internet Explorer. The site is still available to you, however some sections of the site may appear broken. We would encourage you to move to a more modern browser like Firefox, Edge or Chrome in order to experience the site fully.

One Fine Day : A Journey Through English Time, Hardback Book

One Fine Day : A Journey Through English Time Hardback

Hardback

Description

A time-travelling, genealogical adventure, bringing pre-industrial, rural, eighteenth-century England vividly to life on the page. One day Ian Marchant, acclaimed author of books on music, railways and pubs, decided, as all men of a certain age must, to have a dig around his family history.

Surprisingly quickly, a web search informed him that his seven-times-great great-grandfather, Thomas Marchant had left a detailed diary from 1714 to 1728.

So far, so jolly ... Life-loving diarist Thom - who liked a drink and a game of cards - feels recognisably Marchant to Ian.

With fascinating, immersive detail we learn about Thom's family farm and fishponds; about dung, horses and mud; about beer, the wife's nights out, his own job troubles and their shared worries for their children.

But as Ian digs deeper beyond the Sussex diary's bucolic portrait he discovers a subtext - a family descended from immigrants, with anti-establishment politics, who are struggling with illness, political instability and cash crises - just as their country does three centuries on. 'When I was reflecting late one January evening on the differences between Thom and me, I realised the unbridgeable thing that comes between us is industrialisation.

He lived right at its beginning, while I am living somewhere towards its end.

Old Thom Marchant was one of the last people before industrialisation to understand how his world worked - and how to be largely self-sufficient in it.

He knew where his food came from, his fuel, his water, his clothes.

He knew how the welfare system worked, and was part of its administration; he knew who looked after the roads, too.

He collected taxes. He was not separate from the system, but part of it.'Rich with immersive detail, One Fine Day draws a living portrait of Marchant family life in the 1720s and how their England (rainy, muddy, politically turbulent, illness-ridden) became the England of the 2020s.

Information

Other Formats

Save 9%

£20.00

£18.19

 
Free Home Delivery

on all orders

 
Pick up orders

from local bookshops

Information