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London: A Life in Maps

By: Peter Whitfield
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: British Library Publishing Division
ISBN: 0712349197
ISBN-13: 9780712349192
Released: 17 Nov 2006
RRP: £14.95
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

interesting but slightly annoying. - By: M. Horton, 17 Jun 2008
I also love London & love maps, & found this book interesting & informative. However it was possibly not very well edited as on at least three occasions I came across facts that had been given a few pages before. This repetition gave the feeling of the book having been written by several different authors & was almost a collection of short essays rather than a complete piece. Given the title it seemed odd that at least half the illustrations were pictures or photographs rather than maps or plans.
Treasures to delight the eye and illuminate the mind - By: Nicholas Casley, 07 Oct 2007
I love maps & I love London: what a combination!

This book is a companion to the exhibition held at the British Library in 2006-07. The book is split into four sections - London before the Great Fire, the age of elegance, the Victorian metropolis, & the shock of the new - & each section has a page or sometimes two pages devoted to particular aspects of each theme. Thus we have various maps & plans of the Tower & Westminster Abbey mixed with representations of Civil War London in the first section; & visions of Wembley & the Festival of Britain in the final section.

The result is akin to a visual version of Peter Ackroyd's biography of the city. You can dip into this marvellous publication at various points & find treasures to delight the eye & to illuminate the mind, be the maps & plans devoted to the underground, Belgravia, Wren's plans for the post-Fire city or Tudor Smithfield. Each page is concise & self-contained, but, taken as a whole, the vision is panoramic.

As one would expect from a publication by the British Library, the quality of impressive. As well as reproductions of maps & plans, there are also engravings, paintings & photographs to enliven the page. Peter Whitfield's commentary is wise & engaging. He is not afraid to comment on the brutalist tendencies of the post-war era, & his text is the perfect accompaniment to the image presented.

No quibbles? Well, there are two: firstly, although detailed catalogue references are given to the illustrated maps, some maps are surprisingly without a date (for example the map of Epping Forest on page 164). My second quibble - I want these maps!