Description
Based on sound historical research, this is a vibrant retelling of the social, economic, and political context of the Great Plague of London. Lloyd and Dorothy Moote's approach is refreshing and riveting. Their book should have a very wide appeal among general readers and will be of great interest to students and scholars as well. -- William G. Naphy, University of Aberdeen I read this book with enormous pleasure. It succeeds perfectly on all levels, from new scholarship for academics to a great read for everyone else... The interwoven narratives of Pepys and other witnesses give a wonderful feel of London's tensions. As an account of a city whose economy slips into crisis as a result of a medical catastrophe, this has never been bettered... The care and craftsmanship which have gone into it are evident in all the chapters. -- Roy Porter I felt myself walking in the company of Pepys through the streets of a plague-stricken London even as I flew through turbulent skies over a storm-tossed Atlantic. -- Sir John H. Elliott, University of Oxford, author of Imperial Spain, The Old World and the New, and Empires of the Atlantic World
About the Author
A. Lloyd Moote is an emeritus professor at the University of Southern California and an affiliated professor at Rutgers University. He is the author of four books on seventeenth-century European history. Dorothy C. Moote, now retired, was a medical research specialist at Francisco Bravo Medical Magnet High School in Los Angeles. They live in Princeton, New Jersey.
Reviews
The Mootes write with an impressive combination of storytelling and scholarship... Their work provides an example that local historians might consider copying for other locations in Britain. Ancestors Magazine The Mootes' enthusiasm at their archival discoveries flavours their lively account of the Plague Year. London Review of Books This is now the best book available on London's 1665 plague epidemic. Sixteenth Century Journal An extraordinary and insightful account of life in London during 1665, when nearly 100,000 people died of the plague... The story they tell is of two Londons, the working poor of the 'alleys and cellars and tenements,' and the rich, titled, and merchant classes, and how they became 'interdependent' during 1665... An epilogue on the development of microbiology and antibiotic cures forcefully argues that modern society still needs to be better prepared for future infectious diseases. Publishers Weekly Extraordinarily accomplished... A book of rare distinction, one that is able to analyze a city in crisis while never losing sight of the individual lives contained within it. From the tiniest microbe to the most blustery regal proclamation, there seem to be no aspect of Pestered London to which the Mootes did not have access. Guardian In this excellent book, husband and wife Lloyd and Dorothy Moote, a historian and biologist, respectively, have brilliantly captured the human, medical, and political dimensions of the Great Plague in London and the surrounding areas. New England Journal of Medicine The Great Plague is a great read. The authors skillfully integrate evidence from a number of sources, and their enthusiasm for their subject is infectious. -- Tom Beaumont James, PhD, FSA JAMA In this crowded field, this jewel of a book brings a new dimension by telling the story of how the rich and the poor who stayed rather than escaped survived rather than died, maintained order rather than succumbed to chaos, and provided support and sustenance rather than betrayal and impedance. Choice This is a great story of the great plague of London in the 1660s... Fascinating. Journal of the American Association of Forensic Dentists The authors... have produced a readable and reasonable account that should now be the first choice of readers who want to know the story. -- J.N. Hays Medical History
Book Information
ISBN 9780801884931
Author A. Lloyd Moote
Format Paperback
Page Count 384
Imprint Johns Hopkins University Press
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Weight(grams) 522g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 25mm