糖心Vlog

Peter Catterall, Graham Farmelo, Paul Greatrix, Richard Howells and R. C. Richardson...

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Published on
July 3, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Peter Catterall, reader in history, University of Westminster, is reading Frederic Raphael鈥檚 The Glittering Prizes (JR Books, 2007). 鈥淚 have not previously read this book; and, amid the brutal, brilliant and brittle barbs of wit, what strikes me is a sense that, like the survivors of the Great War, Raphael is using his art to cope with a traumatic experience. Perhaps unfortunately, Cambridge three decades later did not affect me in the same way.鈥

Book review: Visions of Science, by James A. Secord

Graham Farmelo, by-fellow, Churchill College, Cambridge, is reading James Secord鈥檚 Visions of Science: Books and Readers at the Dawn of the Victorian Age (Oxford University Press, 2014). 鈥淭he flourishing of popular science books around 1830 has long interested me, so I was delighted to see the leading scholar Jim Secord address the subject. His well-written and handsomely produced volume sheds bright light on the impact of seven books, some of which were unfamiliar to me, including Mary Somerville鈥檚 On the Connexion of the Physical Sciences. With media commentators now routinely predicting the demise of the book, this wonderful account is especially inspiring (or consoling 鈥 I can鈥檛 decide which).鈥

Book review: The Blunders of Our Governments, by Anthony King and Ivor Crewe

Paul Greatrix, registrar, University of Nottingham, is reading Anthony King and Ivor Crewe鈥檚 The Blunders of Our Governments (Oneworld, 2013). 鈥淔ollowing a THE article, I finally got round to this frightening analysis of government failings down the years: the poll tax, Child Support Agency, NHS IT, the Dangerous Dogs Act. Each blunder is examined in detail and, although all are awful, there is recognition of governments鈥 potential to do good. Interestingly, many of the reasons for failure could apply equally in a university context.鈥

Book review: Socialism and the Great State, by H. G. Wells

Richard Howells, reader in culture, media and creative industries, King鈥檚 College London, is reading H. G. Wells鈥 Socialism and the Great State (Harper, 1912). 鈥淧art of the joy of reading my first edition of Wells鈥 edited volume is having to cut some of the pages, showing that after 100 years I am the first person ever to have read this particular volume. I hope I will not be the last: many of these ideas remain intellectually relevant even though so many of our students today assume that 鈥榮ocialism鈥 has to be a dirty word.鈥

Book review: Cromwell's Legacy, edited by Jane Mills

R. C. Richardson, emeritus professor of history, University of Winchester, is reading Cromwell鈥檚 Legacy (Manchester University Press, 2012), edited by Jane A. Mills. 鈥淎 distinctive, insightful and informative collection of new essays, part historical/part historiographical, which explore resonances of the Lord Protector鈥檚 reputation and its different chronologies in England, Scotland, Ireland, mainland Europe, New England and Spanish America, in the short and long term. His religious, military and parliamentary legacies are scrutinised, as are the museums, landscapes, memorabilia and myths associated with him.鈥

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