Lee Jackson is a well-known Victorianist and creator of a preeminent website on Victorian London (www.victorianlondon.org).
"This is a tightly argued, meticulously researched history of
sanitation that reads like a novel."—Paula Byrne, The Times
"Lee Jackson stops to have a good poke around – and consider in
fascinating, sometimes gruesome detail, the filth and nuisances of
the time . . . Utterly engrossing."—Jo Baker, The New York Times
Book Review
"Mr Jackson has written a book that is neat and sparkling, unlike
his subject matter."—Emily Cockayne, Wall Street Journal Europe
“Impressive . . . [Lee] Jackson has written a book that is neat and
sparkling, unlike his subject matter.”—Emily Cockayne, The Wall
Street Journal
"Rich in wonderful contemporary details gleaned from newspapers and
archives, Jackson’s study is a vivid account of the enormous
challenges faced by a city expanding at an unprecedented rate."—P.
D. Smith, The Guardian
“An atypical look at London’s social history. Jackson manages to
make a disgusting topic much funnier than one would
expect.”—Library Journal
"There is an extensive bibliography and index and this makes Dirty
Old London a very welcome addition to the social history of the
Victorian capital. It will be useful to scholars as well as being a
very enjoyable popular history which deserves a wide
readership."—Drew Gray, The London Journal
"From the dustmen who grew rich from recycling, to a history of the
public lavatory, this fascinating book provides a (dare I say
fresh?) insight into life in the Victorian capital."—Current
Archaeology
"Where there’s muck there’s brass. Let’s hope so for Lee Jackson,
author of this volume on all things feculent, filthy and noisome in
the Victorian city. It’s a big topic that deserves a big
audience."—Matt Brown, The Londonist
"The book is engagingly written, and based on a wide reading of
source material and recent academic writing."—Peter Hounsell, Who
Do You Think You Are Magazine
"Delve deep into Victorian London’s dirty streets in this detailed,
but enjoyably graphic, account of efforts to make life better for
the British capital’s growing population."—History Revealed
"This superb book places the humdrum business of keeping a city and
its people clean in a detailed social and political
context."—Jonathan Wright, The Tablet
"This interesting and informative book deserves to have a wide
circulation."—John Beasley, The Methodist Recorder
"This is a fascinating work that will engage both those interested
in Victorian in general and London in particular."—Stephen
Halliday, BBC History Magazine
"I thought I knew nineteenth-century London-this book made me smell
it . . . Mud: it’s so often mentioned in Victorian literature, but
I didn’t know what it was until I read this admirable book."—Clive
Aslet, Country Life
"Dirty Old London is a treat – truly Victorian, in that it is
shocking, entertaining, educational and grisly by turns."—Catharine
Arnold, author of Necropolis: London and its Dead
"I can't think of a better companion with whom to explore London's
underbelly - expert, engaging and approachable."—Sarah Wise, author
of The Blackest Streets: The Life and Death of a Victorian Slum
"So much meticulous research packaged into such a vividly readable
narrative. I loved it."—Liza Picard, author of Victorian London
"The squalor of Victorian London was proverbial. Lee Jackson’s
revelatory clean-up goes behind the headlines to allow us to see
not just what, but why, London was so dirty."—Judith Flanders,
author of The Victorian City: Everyday Life in Dickens' London
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