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Books: The Time Traveler’s Guide to Medieval England

December 27th, 2009 · 2 Comments

A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century **** 4 Stars

By Gabrielle Pantera

The Time Travelers Guide, inspired by A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

The Time Travelers Guide, inspired by A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

HOLLYWOOD, CA (Hollywood Today) 12/27/2009 – “I was passionate about the past and yet history teachers seemed determined to feed me history that was designed to be as tedious as possible,” says The Time Travelers Guide to Medieval England author Dr. Ian Mortimer. “The teachers themselves were fine, but they were all slaves to the syllabus. Thinking about the past should always have an anarchic edge.”

The Time Travelers Guide to Medieval England drops you in the year 1300. Experience how people lived, dressed, worked, the difference between the classes and anything else you want to know about Medieval times but were afraid to ask. An easy read, you can pick it up and read any chapter. The Time Travelers Guide to Medieval England is a surprisingly engrossing read, even if you don’t particularly care about history. For anyone who enjoys history, they’ll be engrossed by the facts that dispel the history taught about that time frame, for instance, the aristocracy had indoor plumbing.

“I first realized I wanted history to have a present-tense dimension at the age of about ten, in the hall of Grosmont Castle in South Wales,” says Mortimer. “I was very disappointed that it didn’t measure up to my imagination, being a quiet ruin rather than a bustling medieval fortress.”

Mortimer got the idea for a fun history book in 1993, inspired by Douglas Adams’ A Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. However, that was postponed when in a friend recommended he speak to a woman called Sophie, working at the corporate office of a major bookshop chain. “Six months later she moved in,” says Mortimer. “Two years later we married. In the process I became somewhat distracted.” Thirteen years passed before he actually sat down to write The Time Traveller’s Guide to Medieval England.

Mortimer has written an interlinked series of four biographies of medieval individuals, retelling the story of power in England from 1300 to 1415 from the point of view of the biggest “mover and shaker” in each generation. The first three are The Greatest Traitor about Sir Roger Mortimer, 1st earl of March, who governed England from 1327 to 1330, The Perfect King about Edward III and The Fears of Henry IV.

The fourth of this series, 1415, is a book about Henry V in the year 1415, the year of Agincourt. That was published in the UK in September 2009. In that book I trace the king’s movements and those of his enemies on a day-by-day basis. A fifth book, Warrior of the Roses, is under contract for publication in 2013.

Next for Mortimer is a volume of scholarly essays about the fourteenth century and how evidence must be deconstructed to determine how reliable it is. “I will reveal what I think happened to Edward II after his fake death in 1327,” says Mortimer.

Dr. Ian Mortimer was born in Petts Wood in the London Borough of Bromley. “It only had one pub,” says Mortimer. “I had to leave.” Currently he resides in Dartmoor, Devon, where his family lived for centuries before they went to Petts Wood. He lives in Moretonhampstead, a small town on the edge of a moor.

The Time Traveler’s Guide to Medieval England: A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century by Ian Mortimer.

Hardcover, 352 pages, Publisher: Touchstone (December 29, 2009), Language: English

ISBN-13: 978-1439112892 $26.

http://www.ianmortimer.com

2 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Naomi Hamm // Jan 6, 2010 at 5:02 pm

    I liked the latest Sandra Bullock flick. totally true to form and the plot was different than other movies. Not much violence, a movie you would be proud to take your kids to.

  • 2 Naomi Hamm // Jan 12, 2010 at 5:41 pm

    I am sure I would adore this one, since I love history and ancient history.

    what has been passed down through the ages is all we have to relate to and to give future generations.

    Just think of it folks, sitting around the fireplace with your mulled cinnamon and nutmeg apple–brandy cider, how unique it is to pass along the history of your family and their struggles from the very beginning.

    It teaches them to do the same when they become parents/grandparents.

    I just love the Tudor Dressing and the styles of those times, so diffferent and yet still so connected to ours.

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