Biographies & Memoirs, Historical, Europe, History, Great Britain
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Synopsis
From AudioFile Pepys (pronounced PEEPS) kept a diary in cipher from 1660 to 1669, when he was working himself up the ladder of London officialdom. His accounts of the Plague and the Great London Fire are fascinating. The diary reveals him as vigorous, earthy, amusing, diligent, and keenly observant. Those interested in understanding the England of this tumultuous period could do no better than to consult Pepys (and Defoe's A JOURNAL OF THE PLAGUE YEAR). Lacking notes, this brief selection is of use mostly to students trying to make sense of Pepys's abbreviated style and antiquated diction. For such a task, the celebrated actor-director Kenneth Branagh is very helpful. He admirably conveys the thrust of the entries and the personality of the diarist. Much of the underlying emotional content is missing, however. Y.R. Β© AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine-- Copyright Β© AudioFile, Portland, Maine Product Description Samuel Pepys was a remarkable man who witnessed the coronation of Charles II, the Great Plague of 1665, and the Great Fire of 1666. Originally scribbled in a cryptic shorthand, Pepys' quotidian journal of life in Restoration London provides an astonishingly frank and diverting account of political intrigues; naval, church, and cultural affairs; and the sexual escapades and domestic strife of a man with a voracious, childlike appetite for living. Kenneth Branagh reads selections from Pepys' diary in this audiocassette version.Book Details
Published
April 14, 2003
Publisher
Hodder & Stoughton Audio Books
ISBN
9781840327311