A major new work by one of Britain's leading journalists and most acclaimed historians
Simon Heffer was born in 1960. He read English at Cambridge and took a PhD in modern history at that university. His previous books include- Moral Desperado- A Life of Thomas Carlyle, Like the Roman- The Life of Enoch Powell, Power and Place- The Political Consequences of King Edward VII, Nor Shall My Sword- The Reinvention of England, Vaughan Williams, Strictly English, A Short History of Power, Simply English and High Minds- The Victorians and the Birth of Modern Britain. In a thirty-year career in Fleet Street, he has held senior editorial positions on The Daily Telegraph and The Spectator, and is now a columnist for The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph.
A riveting account of the pre-First World War years . . . A
gloriously rich history . . . Balanced and judicious . . . The Age
of Decadence is an enormously impressive and enjoyable read.
*Sunday Times*
Heffer has given us a magnificent account of a less than
magnificent epoch . . . Vital and energetic.
*Literary Review*
Magisterial.
*Spectator*
The Age of Decadence is an impressively well-constructed book . . .
Heffer weaves his wonderfully diverse strands of inquiry into a
devastating critique of prewar Britain . . . Heffer’s criticism of
unbridled traditionalism is devastating and convincing. It’s also
disturbingly relevant to the world in which we live.
*The Times*
Mr Heffer combines a scholar’s command of the primary literature
with a journalist’s eye for detail. He writes with admirable
sensitivity about both music and literature: a better account of
Elgar or Arnold Bennett would be hard to find. He does a brilliant
job of exposing the rot beneath the glittering surface of late
Victorian and Edwardian Britain . . . He writes with such
exuberance – indeed with such Edwardian swagger – that he leaves
the reader looking forward to his next volume.
*The Economist*
A rich social history of a time when progress and cruelty collided
. . . Heffer provides a painfully relevant story about the
dangerous decadence of traditionalism.
*The Times*
Monumental . . . [Heffer writes] with much illuminating detail to
carry the story forward.
*Spectator*
[An] intelligent, richly detailed and comprehensive survey.
*Standpoint*
The Age of Decadence will be consulted with pleasure by the general
reader as well as by the student . . . So well written that one
would not have it a page shorter.
*Daily Telegraph*
The rise of the middle class is just one of the grand narratives
that runs through its pages, along with Irish Home Rule, women’s
suffrage and a taste of Elgar . . . A really riveting read.
*Free Thinking*
This is scholarship of a high order: an impressive ability to
synthesise wide-ranging sources and provide a cogent, readable
narrative is spiced by the confident opinions, not to say barbs, of
the newspaper columnist.
*Country Life*
Covers as much ground as the miles of Edwardian housing spreading
out along the new Tube lines of London, and is as packed with
pompous politicians as the House of Commons was on a busy day in
the debate about Irish Home Rule. The fact that I now know about
all those things shows how rewarding the book is.
*Daily Mail*
An account of the thirty years or so leading up to the First World
War . . . [Heffer] is interested in exploring the political and
social tumult of the time, which really can’t be exaggerated
*Today*
Simon Heffer’s Age of Decadence covers a period of British history
– 1880 to 1914 – that few would at first sight equate with
decadence. As the British Empire reached its height, stiff upper
lips seemed more in evidence than the louche trappings of
decadence. Yet Heffer makes a convincing (and beautifully written)
case that those upper lips were in fact quivering away, as the
world went clanking towards its destruction.
*Andrew Roberts*
Heffer’s history of fin-de-siècle Britain is full of decadent
delights . . . Richly and wittily written.
*Sunday Times*
There is a view, commonly held, that grand narrative histories are
a thing of the past . . . This view is mistaken, as Simon Heffer
proves happily and beyond doubt with his latest book.
*Catholic Herald*
There is much to enjoy in this long account, packed with
detail.
*New Statesman*
A superb history
*Daily Telegraph*
Beautifully written and packed with intriguing facts, [The Age of
Decadence] is an engaging read that will appeal to historians and
general readers alike . . . Superb.
*The Lady*
A social, political and cultural history of late Victorian and
Edwardian Britain, carefully examining the contradictions of the
period . . . Highly readable.
*Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine*
[Heffer] has really excelled himself with this epic study of
Britain in the years before the First World War. Majestic in its
scope, meticulous in its scholarship, compelling in its thesis and
stylish in its prose, his heavyweight book challenges the familiar
historical tale of confidence and swagger and presents the age in a
more complex, sombre light . . . The author has done an
extraordinary amount of research, unearthing a wealth of new
material from archives. . . . It is impossible to read this
magnificent work without gaining a deep new understanding of a
unique and troubled age.
*Daily Express*
[One of] the best historical books to gift others this
Christmas.
*Daily Mail*
Heffer has turned himself into one of Britain’s most accomplished
and formidable men of letters . . . Heffer is a genuine
intellectual with a shelf of books to his credit.
*Spectator*
An epic survey . . . Simon Heffer’s intricately detailed account
ends with Britain diminished and on the brink of catastrophe.
*Daily Mail*
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