Customer Reviews
comprehensive and fascinating - By: conjunction, 13 Jan 2005 
This is more or less the only available general history of Britainin the eighteenth century. Mr. O'Gorman is professor of history at Manchester University & is writing for students & other academics. He has clearly read the entire literature on the subject & refers frequently to it, & a feature of the book is his weighing up of opposing viewpoints.
The style of the book is to chop the period up into three or four segments & then go through each segment three times, lookingin turn at political, social & other aspects. This can be wearisome particularly to the general reader such as myself, but the result is a thoroughly thought through & comprehensive understanding of the period. You have to really want to understand how the social aspects, of say working class movement for reform or the influence of the movement for catholic emancipation workedin with the political juggling of Canning & Peel to really enjoy this book, but if you do it works a treat.
At times I felt Mr. O'Gorman's enthusiastic juggling of the different strands leads to unintentional obscurity - some sentences I just could not figure out, & it can be irritating when he repeatedly refers to events without explaining them because he doesn't do that until the next chapter. Also if you want blow by blow accounts of the Napoleonic wars or the glories of our foreign policy you need to read a more traditional history, here you just get enough to produce a balanced account of lifein Britain & the general development of our country.
On balance a readable, enthusiastic, balanced & comprehensive history of a fascinating period.