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The Story of England by Michael Wood
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The Story of England (original 2010; edition 2012)

by Michael Wood (Author)

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2284119,146 (4.12)3
Michael Wood tells the story of one place, the village of Kibworth, Leicestershire, throughout the whole of English history. Located in the very heart of England, Kibworth has lived through the Black Death, the Civil War and the Industrial Revolution, and was even bombed in World War II. With the help of the local people and using archaeology, landscape, language and DNA, Michael Wood uncovers the lost history of this village from the Roman era to the present day.… (more)
Member:night_owl13
Title:The Story of England
Authors:Michael Wood (Author)
Info:Penguin Books (2012), Edition: Reprint, 480 pages
Collections:As Seen on TV
Rating:
Tags:American Housewife, 2024

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The Story of England by Michael Wood (2010)

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Showing 4 of 4
A history of England through the lens of a Leicestershire village.

Not too bad, but could get very detailed. That said the TV series was excellent and this book fllls in the gaps left by that as it could not cover everything in the eight one hour shows. ( )
  PDCRead | Apr 6, 2020 |
I would fully recommend reading this book if you want to get a handle on English history, or at least the history of a typical Midlands village. It is pleasantly biased towards the 'Dark Ages' and early medieval period (Wood's speciality) and skips over the 20th century in one short chapter - usually history books are the other way around. I understood all kinds of history for the first time - the Peasants Revolt, enclosure, emergence of non-conformists - all in an easy to read style. ( )
  boo262 | Jan 23, 2012 |
Written to go with TV series, and I haven't been able to see the series. More focused on political and religious developments than everyday life. A bit on frame knitters ( )
  Janientrelac | Dec 25, 2011 |
04 Jan 2011 - Waterstones

A clever telling of English history through the history of one village in Leicestershire, Kibworth, which handily has a lot of archaeological and documentary evidence associated with it, showing how it has been affected by the sweep of history. Great on the early times, and not as much speculation as I'd feared - but it skips rather after the 1600s, and I'd have loved a round-up of the "Big Dig" findings that inspired the TV series. Suffered from a lack of commas and general copy-editing, but good maps and illustrations and in general a good read. ( )
  LyzzyBee | Jul 17, 2011 |
Showing 4 of 4
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Originally published: London: Viking, 2010.
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Michael Wood tells the story of one place, the village of Kibworth, Leicestershire, throughout the whole of English history. Located in the very heart of England, Kibworth has lived through the Black Death, the Civil War and the Industrial Revolution, and was even bombed in World War II. With the help of the local people and using archaeology, landscape, language and DNA, Michael Wood uncovers the lost history of this village from the Roman era to the present day.

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