Today is world book day to promote reading especially
in kids. These days we pick up our e reader and download the latest books or go
to the book shop and get our hands on a proper book. We have books everywhere
from the libraries to the shelves at home. We read everything from a good
murder mystery to a political thriller to a good paranormal book. But what were
our ancestors reading?
Now for me it would be a great paranormal book full of
werewolves and vampires. But then there are the great books that combine
genealogy, history and mystery. I love 2 series of these book, the Morton
Farrier books by Nathan Dylan Goodwin and the Steve Robinson series based
around Jefferson Tayte. There are more series out there but these are my
favourite. Then there’s a good history book whether fact or fiction. I’m a fan
of anything by Phillipa Gregory and Alison Weir.
In 1950 one of the best selling books was Animal Farm by
Orson Wells (I prefer Orson’s farm the cartoon series). The book is basically a
look at what was happening in 1940’s Europe told through the eyes of animals
portraying the main political figures. For the younger reader the frankly
excellent The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe by CS Lewis was published. This
is the story of 4 evacuated children who enter another world through a wardrobe
and the side of good under the command of Aslan the Lion take on the evil side
of the Witch.
If we go further back to 1900 the grownups could pick up a
copy of The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud and for the kids it was
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L Frank Baum. I’ll admit I’ve never read either
but they were all the rage at the time. Maybe my Great Grandparents or Great,
Great Grandparents picked up a copy.
In 1890 you could read the latest Sherlock Holmes, The Sign
of Four by Arthur Conan Doyle (he wasn’t knighted until 1902) or for the kids
there was English Fairy Tales by Joseph Jacobs. This was a collection of fairy
tales including some well-known ones such as Jack and the Beanstalk and less
known ones such as The Fish and the Ring. If you’re interested you can read the
book here: https://archive.org/details/englishfairytale00jaco
Let’s go back to 1880 where our ancestors may have settled
down to read the latest Mark Twain A Tramp Abroad or for the little ones Carlo
Collodi’s The Adventures of Pinocchio.
Now in 1870 one of the most famous nursery rhymes was
written in the Owl and the Pussycat. For the older reader they could read the
latest by the French writer Jules Verne. They could descend under the waves on
board the Nautilus and attempt to find the sea monster through Twenty Thousand
Leagues under the Sea.
Jules Verne |
The 1860’s saw Wilkie Collins publish the novel the Woman in
White which was a good old who done it. If this wasn’t our ancestor’s bag then
maybe they would have reached for the new novel by George Eliot The Mill on the
Floss which follows the lives of 2 siblings as they grow up.
1850 would have seen people reading for David Copperfield
(the book not a person) by Charles Dickens and in 1840 Edgar Allan Poe published
his Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque which was a collection of short
stories.
1830 saw the publishing of the novel The Fortunes of Perkin
Warbeck by Mary Shelley which considered that Perkin Warbeck was actually
Richard of York the second son of King Edward IV. For the children why not the
Chronicles of a School Room by Anna Maria Hall.
Back in 1820 the novel of the year was Ivanhoe by Sir Walter
Scott which is set in medieval Scotland in the 12th century. 1810
could have seen your ancestor’s reading the latest by Percy Bysshe Shelley
entitled Zastrozzi which is a romance set in Germany.
Now some of these books are still loved today by some even
if they just know the books by film and TV adaptations but they do still live on
and can be read by us today.
I suppose what we should remember in all this is that we
have access to books and we can all read them when we want. This wasn’t a
luxury our ancestors may have had. They may not have been able to read and
books would have been too expensive for them to buy. The central library in
Sheffield didn’t open until 1934 so before then you would have to buy your
books. So this world book day why not settle down with a book you’ve being
bursting to read and lose yourself in the pages. Now will it be Freddy the
Frog, Don’t Forget the Bacon or Eric Carle’s seminal work The Very Hungry Caterpillar!
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