Ben East 

Restoration: The Year of the Great Fire by Alexander Larman – review

Alexander Larman’s breezy study of England in 1666 captures both ends of society in an eventful year
  
  

Alexander Larman: 'Manages to give labourers and royalty equal billing.'
Alexander Larman: ‘Manages to give labourers and royalty equal billing.’ Photograph: Alicia Pollett

Alexander Larman says in his introduction to Restoration: The Year of the Great Fire that his first book, a biography of John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, left him with a sense of unfinished business, that there was more to explore than merely the life of the scandalous Restoration poet. He expands on Wilmot’s world in this chronicle of 1666, a breezy account of an England in which (in addition to London going up in flames) Isaac Newton sees an apple fall from a tree, Eyam in Derbyshire becomes the famous quarantined plague village and Charles II is a “suave and all-welcoming figurehead”. Divided into readable chapters on “King and Court”, “Science and Superstition”, “Going Out” and so on, Restoration – at just over 250 pages – perhaps lacks the depth that the period requires: Claire Tomalin’s Pepys biography The Unequalled Self is still the definitive account of the time. But this is an accessible snapshot of Restoration England, which manages to give labourers and royalty equal billing.

Restoration is published by Head of Zeus (£20). Click here to order it for £16

 

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