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.

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Member Reviews

3 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.
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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

Picture of author.
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

Some Editions

Rammus, Raivo (TÕlkija.)

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, History, Food & Cooking
DDC/MDS
641TechnologyHome economics & family managementFood and drink
LCC
TX783 .R48TechnologyHome economicsHome economicsCooking
BISAC

Statistics

Members
295
Popularity
108,350
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.42)
Languages
English, Estonian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
9
ASINs
3