![]() ![]() He gracefully draws connections between an eclectic array of events that have affected home life, covering everything from the relationship between cholera outbreaks and modern landscaping, to toxic makeup, highly flammable hoopskirts, and other unexpected hazards of fashion. "Houses are really quite odd things," Bryson writes, and, luckily for us, he is a writer who thrives on oddities. With waggish humor and a knack for unearthing the extraordinary stories behind the seemingly commonplace, he examines how everyday items-things like ice, cookbooks, glass windows, and salt and pepper-transformed the way people lived, and how houses evolved around these new commodities. ![]() While walking through his own home, a former Church of England rectory built in the 19th century, Bryson reconstructs the fascinating history of the household, room by room. Amazon Best Books of the Month, October 2010: Bill Bryson ( A Short History of Nearly Everything) turns his attention from science to society in his authoritative history of domesticity, At Home: A Short History of Private Life. ![]()
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