The Regency Years: During Which Jane Austen Writes, Napoleon Fights, Byron Makes Love, and Britain Becomes Modern (Paperback)
An Economist History Book of the Year
“Elegant, entertaining and frequently surprising.” —Miranda Seymour, New York Times Book Review
The Victorians are often credited with ushering in our current era, yet the seeds of change were planted during the earlier Regency period (1811–1820) when the profligate Prince of Wales—the future king George IV—succeeded his father. Around the Prince Regent surged a society of contrasts: evangelicalism and hedonism, elegance and brutality, exuberance and despair. Capturing the Napoleonic Wars, the rise of artists—the Shelleys, Austen, Keats, Byron, Turner—scientists and inventors—Stevenson, Davy, Faraday—and a cast of dissident journalists, military leaders, and fashionistas, Robert Morrison captivatingly illuminates the ways this period shaped the modern world.
— Michael Dirda - Washington Post
A lively account of a turning point in British history.… Robert Morrison creates an indelible impression of the Regency.
— Clare Brant - Times Higher Education (UK)
Superb.… The Regency period lasted for less than a decade but, as Mr. Morrison argues, ‘its many legacies are still all around us.’ It was also, as this book amply proves, marvellously entertaining.
— Economist
[A] zippy and vivid portrait.
— Henry Hitchings - Sunday Times (UK)
The Prince Regent… ruled over a period of extraordinary creativity and it is that progressive cultural legacy that Mr. Morrison commends to contemporary Britain and the rest of the world.
— Ruth Scurr - Wall Street Journal
Robert Morrison is my ideal of what a scholar should be—lively and interesting, he makes the past relevant to today.
— David Morrell, author of the Thomas and Emily De Quincey trilogy
This engaging history transports readers to England.
— Tom Beer - Newsday
A triumph of historical storytelling.
— Deidre Shauna Lynch, author of Loving Literature: A Cultural History
The Regency Years reads like a romance novel of its period without the novel, but makes an entertaining nonfiction read with superior prose and dialogue.
— Robert S. Davis - New York Journal of Books
Readers of this brilliant book will enjoy a rich experience, full of memorable surprises.
— Patricia Meyer Spacks, author of The Female Imagination