Sweets: A History of Candy
by Tim Richardson
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Description
We are all, secretly or openly, obsessed with sweet things. From the very earliest human societies - there is evidence that Neolithic people made sweets - to modern day, there is nothing more likely to get your juices flowing than a sweet.Tags
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Member Reviews
If I retain even half the information in this book, I'd be surprised. He spends a long time on the history of the sugar trade and the early uses of it, which gets a little dry and repetitive, but then it picks up again once he starts getting into the chronology of candy.
Biggest quibbles: how impressed the author was with himself (how many times did he refer to himself as an "international confectionery historian"?), and the lack of serial commas. I understand that this book was published in England, where their laws of punctuation are apparently more lax than here, but his lack of serial commas led to a number of sentences of the "I'd like to thank my parents, Ayn Rand and God" type (not to mention lists that were strung together as "X, show more y and z and a and b").
It hardly seems fair to downgrade his rating based on a style point on which his country and I disagree, but it's my rating and I can. Though his "I'm so important; I'm the only international confectionery historian in all the world" irked me, too. But his information was good. 3.5 stars, if I could. show less
Biggest quibbles: how impressed the author was with himself (how many times did he refer to himself as an "international confectionery historian"?), and the lack of serial commas. I understand that this book was published in England, where their laws of punctuation are apparently more lax than here, but his lack of serial commas led to a number of sentences of the "I'd like to thank my parents, Ayn Rand and God" type (not to mention lists that were strung together as "X, show more y and z and a and b").
It hardly seems fair to downgrade his rating based on a style point on which his country and I disagree, but it's my rating and I can. Though his "I'm so important; I'm the only international confectionery historian in all the world" irked me, too. But his information was good. 3.5 stars, if I could. show less
Quite interesting. This was a remarkably detailed account of the actual history of candy and how it came to be - not about candy companies like I was expecting. Very well researched though it got bogged down at times with detail.
Disappointingly superficial, coy, self-consciously clever writing.
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ThingScore 100
For us, and for almost anyone with a big sweet tooth, the British journalist Tim Richardson's ''Sweets'' is manna. Like a double-layer Whitman's Sampler, this history of candy is full of delights.
added by khuggard
Author Information

19+ Works 927 Members
Tim Richardson's grandfather worked for a fudge company: his father was a dentist. A contributing editor to Wallpaper' magazine and a regular contributor to the Daily Telegraph and the Sunday Times, he lives in London, where he is in the process of refining his own candy invention
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- Members
- 295
- Popularity
- 108,350
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.42)
- Languages
- English, Estonian
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 9
- ASINs
- 3



























































