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    The Great Fire of London: In That Apocalyptic Year, 1666

    The Great Fire of London: In That Apocalyptic Year, 1666

    by Neil Hanson


    eBook

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      ISBN-13: 9780471444824
    • Publisher: Wiley
    • Publication date: 11/18/2002
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 320
    • Sales rank: 282,099
    • File size: 4 MB

    NEIL HANSON is the author of "The Custom of the Sea" (Wiley) and thirty other books under his own name and a variety of pen names. He lives in West Yorkshire, England.

    Table of Contents

    Glossaryix
    Acknowledgmentsxiii
    Prefacexvii
    1Repent or Burn1
    2The Hellish Design25
    3The Lodge of All Combustibles43
    4A Lake of Fire59
    5A Hideous Storm75
    6Outlandish Men97
    7A Sign of Wrath107
    8The Fires of Hell119
    9Clamor and Peril143
    10Firestorm149
    11A Dismal Desert161
    12The Fatal Contrivance179
    13The Duke of Exeter's Daughter201
    14The Triple Tree215
    15The Wastelands227
    16Dust to Dust241
    Notes251
    Bibliography265
    Illustration Credits285
    Index287

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    Untold numbers perished; great buildings and ancient districts disappeared; knowledge acquired and stored over centuries was lost forever. The Great Fire of London accomplished what the Spanish Armada and the plague had failed to do -- it reduced the world's most majestic city to utter ruin. The Great Fire of London recreates this cataclysmic event through precisely etched dramas drawn from firsthand accounts of those who lived through the all-consuming blaze. Like all great disasters, the great fire brought out the best, the worst, and the most heartbreaking aspects of humanity. You'll meet the king who rallied his subjects to battle the fire, the cart drivers who charged a lifetime's wages to haul a single load of goods to safety, and the elderly couple who continued to sweep their tidy cottage, even as they were engulfed in flames.

    With an unerring eye for evocative detail, author Neil Hanson creates a striking portrait of pre-fire London, its narrow alleys and jettied houses a testament to the city's medieval past, every vestige of which would soon be obliterated. His graphic descriptions of the conflagration, written in prose as fiercely driven as the flames themselves, are, according to the Daily Telegraph (London), "the literary equivalent of the special effects in a disaster movie." Many Londoners were certain that the fire was a dreadful judgment -- God's wrath visited at last on a sinful earth. The book describes in detail the chemistry and behavior of firestorms, making it easy to understand why anyone might have felt that way -- especially when the melting leaden roof of St. Paul's Cathedral rained boiling droplets down upon terrified onlookers. The book also lays the groundwork for several convincing theories on the origins of the blaze.

    Supplemented with period illustrations, maps, and photos, The Great Fire of London tells a riveting tale of terror and courage, chaos and resilience, despair and the rebirth of hope. This unforgettable account is must reading for anyone who is fascinated by great disasters, British history, or the indomitable human spirit.

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    Daily Telegraph
    The brilliance of its narrative chapters . . . a marvelous eye for evocative detail. Hanson's prose is animated by the ferocious energy of the fire and seems to be guided by its inexorable movement. He creates the literary equivalent of the special effects in a disaster movie. . . . A rich mixture of imagination and research.
    Times Literary Supplement
    Popular narrative history at its best, well researched, imaginatively and dramatically written. . . . The author marshals his story and his mass of contemporary quotations with great skill.
    From the Publisher
    "Popular narrative history at its best, well researched, imaginatively and dramatically written... The author marshals his story and his mass of contemporary quotation with great skill." ("Times Literary Supplement")

    "The brilliance of its narrative chapters... He has a marvelous eye for evocative detail. Hanson's prose is animated by the ferocious energy of the fire and seems to be guided by its inexorable movement. He creates the literary equivalent of the special effects in a disaster movie. The Dreadful Judgement is so compelling... a rich mixture of imagination and research." ("Daily Telegraph")

    "He writes with knowledge and verve. As if making a television documentary on a natural disaster, he includes a gripping technical chapter on the mechanism and chemistry of combustion. This works brilliantly... The book gains immeasurably from the authors eye for detail and from his understanding of the beliefs and prejudices of the day... This informative and lively account." ("Sunday Times")

    "Hanson's book sifts through the ashes and comes up with some intriguing theories." ("Daily Mail")

    "The Best Depiction of the Great Fire seen to date... He manages to describe not only the atmosphere of the event itself, but also the experience of living in seventeenth century Britain." ("Soho Independent")

    "Neil Hanson's descriptions of the inferno are like CNN reports from Kosovo." ("Camden New Journal")

    "Blends high-class original research with a pacy narrative style that mimics fiction... Horrific subjects have served this man well and he has a knack for plugging into the dark themes that run like molten rivers beneath our social veneer." ("New Zealand Herald")

    "Extraordinary images abound: molten lead pours off St Paul's cathedral and runs silver in the streets; bodies burn six feet under in their graves." ("New Zealand Listener")

    "It's not the technical data which makes the book so riveting though. It's the flair with which Hanson invests his account with qua

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