Customer Reviews
1065 or what? - By: T. P. Wikeley, 06 Mar 2008 
I love this play. I acted it out in 1972 & loved it at Eggars Grammar School, Alton ,Hampshire.
Miss Burt I thank you. You were my inspiration1
Great Historical Humour - By: Jenesis, 09 Feb 2008 
The precursor to the Horrible History series, '1066' has long been a classic. There's nothing much I can add to the other reviews - it's a funny history book.
Oh, & to the person who described it as a bad history book & "wildly inaccurate": You, sir, are an idiot.
Noel and Ellen's Inspiration - By: Scoby, 12 Dec 2007 
Noel happily made reference to "1066 & All That" on the fly-leaf of his own title. Ellen had never heard of it, & wanted to know why anyone-else would have, either. "It's a classic of the British hunour genre", said Noel. "It's the genre's 'Top Book'! Any British humour writer, with leanings towards history would give Harold II's eye-teeth to be compared with it!" And then it turns out to be its 75th anniversary, & everyone wants to parody it (2066 & All That, 1966 & All That, etc) & be compared with it. Too spooky! Don't you think?
Absolutely Hilarious - By: Mrs. K. A. Wheatley, 22 Nov 2007 
This book is one of the top comedy books in the world ever & must be read immediately by anyone needing serious cheering up, anyone interested in history, & anyone who needs a good laugh.
The book takes the form of an abridged jaunt through the history of Britain from 1066. It is set out as a school text book, & at the end of every chapter is an exam. The exams for me are the absolute highlight of the book, parodying so well, the exact stupidity of exam questions & the ridiculous language in which they are written.
The theory of the book is that this is history as it is remembered by adults from what they learned as a child, so do not expect to actuallly gain any historical knowledge from this book at alll, & if you've never studied history, then you probably won't find it funny, because it is the school boy errors in this which make it such a delight. My particular favourite is the migration of the Venerable Bede to the Venomous Bead, which makes him sound so much more exciting than he actuallly is.
Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant.
MUCH IMITATED BUT NEVER EQUALLED - By: M. Drake, 14 Nov 2007 
This extremely funny book shakes up the learning by rote of English history leaving the pieces scattered over an English landscape richer & more implausible with ever twist & turn of the Author`s imaginations. A must read for anyone looking for comic relief from the dead hand of history.
Mick Drake author of the comic novel All`s Well at Wellwithoute