Picture of author.

About the Author

Gavin Weightman is a social historian whose books focus on the origins of modern society. He is the author of the best-selling London's Thames, The Frozen Water Trade, and Signor Marconi's Magic Box.

Includes the name: Gavin Weightman

Image credit: unitedagents.co.uk

Series

Works by Gavin Weightman

The Frozen Water Trade: A True Story (2002) 246 copies, 5 reviews
London River: The Thames Story (1990) 27 copies, 1 review
The Making of Modern London (2007) 27 copies, 2 reviews
London Past (1991) 18 copies
PICTURE POST BRITAIN. (1991) 18 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1945-03-04
Date of death
2022-12-18
Gender
male
Occupations
journalist
documentary filmmaker
Nationality
UK
Places of residence
North London, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

12 reviews
An interesting book about a fairly obscure industry, one that was so omnipresent a hundred years and more ago that it would be hard to find a community of any size that wasn't somehow affected by it. The book focuses on Frederic Tudor, the most successful of the frozen water trade entrepreneurs and the originator of many of the practices of the business. Overall it's a pretty good book, although at times it does bog down a bit by focusing on the Tudor family issues. Also, due (according to show more the author) to a lack of sources, I felt there was a lack of breadth in the narrative, the book being more of a biography than an overview of an industry. These however are minor issues and the book is still worth the reading. show less
19 Dec 2009 - Borders

Another Borders closing sale bargain. I didn't even know this book existed before I found it. Subtitled "A people's history of the Capital from 1815 to the present day" it is just that, an excellent survey of the time period, broken into four long sections which are in turn based on four separate books. Each section has themed chapters, so we learn about the West End, the East End, transport, shops, policing, immigration etc across each section of the time period, which show more works really well. As well as history gleaned from official records, we also have letters, diaries and eventually oral history from people who lived through the times (because the originals were published in the 1980s, these go back a bit further than a similar project could do today) and these give it an excellent lively flavour and truth. Good illustrations and an obvious love for London and enthusiasm for history make this big fat book an enjoyable read, even after wallowing around in the social history of the 20th century as much as I have been doing recently! show less
A well-researched and well-written biography of Marconi, with a good selection of contemporary photographs which allow the reader to appreciate how different radio technology was in its early days.

Marconi's life, and the world in which he lived and which affected and directed his work, is described in detail, as are the efforts of others who contributed - or claimed to contribute - to the development of radio.

The part that I found frustrating was the lack of technical detail, despite the show more fact that it is alluded to frequently. It becomes clear that Marconi - and many others in radio's early days - simply did not understand many basic ideas of how radio worked. The problems of tuning are frequently mentioned. But I would have appreciated knowing more, from a contemporary perspective, about what they were actually doing, and why (for instance) a magnetic coherer was superior to the device which preceded it.

That frustration aside, this book does an excellent job both of telling Marconi's story, warts and all, and reminding us what the world was like before radio, and the changes radio made possible.
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½
In this work on London, much better reading than his London’s Thames, Weightman is back into the excellent, flowing writing and solid construction of the tale he previously evidenced in his works The Frozen Water Trade (http://www.librarything.com/work/327327) and his exciting tale on Marconi and his “Magic” Box (http://www.librarything.com/work/456154).

Originally, the four volumes of The Making of Modern London were the basis of a Thames TV Documentary (hence the secondary author, show more film maker Steve Humphries) and were published as four separate books. It covers the period of the late Victorians but comes up through the histories of the building of the railways, the massive London Docks and the slums, to the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth and the decline of the British Empire. London suffered immensely during the wars and to the blight of poverty, the Blitz of Hitler’s bombers added homeless thousands, separated families and left just bombed, fire-scorched rubble where once whole communities lived.

The slow recovery, the swing to the Labour Party and with the slow introduction of better health-care and decent housing London then recovered yet again and boomed into the ‘swinging sixties’ and consumerism of the 70s.

This is a well written and intimate story of London, from villages and open fields to the city that still thrills and charms its visitors and inhabitants. As Dr. Johnson once remarked, London is life … and this book is one of its great autobiographies.
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Statistics

Works
24
Members
987
Popularity
#26,087
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
12
ISBNs
55
Languages
1

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