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The Club

Johnson, Boswell, and the Friends Who Shaped an Age

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The story of the group of extraordinary eighteenth-century writers, artists, and thinkers who gathered weekly at a London tavern
Named one of the 10 Best Books of 2019 by the New York Times Book Review
  • A Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2019
  • Kirkus Best Book of 2019

    "Damrosch brings the Club's redoubtable personalities—the brilliant minds, the jousting wits, the tender camaraderie—to vivid life."New York Times Book Review
    "Magnificently entertaining."—Washington Post
    In 1763, the painter Joshua Reynolds proposed to his friend Samuel Johnson that they invite a few friends to join them every Friday at the Turk's Head Tavern in London to dine, drink, and talk until midnight. Eventually the group came to include among its members Edmund Burke, Adam Smith, Edward Gibbon, and James Boswell. It was known simply as "the Club."

    In this captivating book, Leo Damrosch brings alive a brilliant, competitive, and eccentric cast of characters. With the friendship of the "odd couple" Samuel Johnson and James Boswell at the heart of his narrative, Damrosch conjures up the precarious, exciting, and often brutal world of late eighteenth†'century Britain. This is the story of an extraordinary group of people whose ideas helped to shape their age, and our own.
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      • Kirkus

        Starred review from February 15, 2019
        Memorable portraits of members of a London club who met weekly to discuss literature, politics, and life.From 1764 to 1784, a group of men met once a week in a private room at the Turk's Head Tavern in London for conversation and, in varying degrees, camaraderie. They called themselves, simply, "The Club," and they included some of the most prominent personalities of the time, including Edward Gibbon, Adam Smith, Joshua Reynolds, Edmund Burke, David Garrick, Oliver Goldsmith, Richard Sheridan, and, most significantly, Samuel Johnson and his acutely observant biographer James Boswell, who take center stage in this masterful collective biography. Like Jenny Uglow did in The Lunar Men (2002), Damrosch (English/Harvard Univ.; Eternity's Sunrise: The Imaginative World of William Blake, 2015, etc.) offers incisive portraits of individual members, highlighting their relationships and interactions with one another to reveal "the teeming, noisy, contradictory, and often violent world" they inhabited. It was a world confronting upheaval: noisy agitation in Britain's American Colonies, bloody rebellion in France, debate over slavery, and domestic economic stress. Between 1739 and 1783, Damrosch notes, Britain was at war for 24 years, at peace for 20. In 1776, Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations and Edward Gibbon's The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire both spoke to national preoccupations: Smith, to inequality and the consequences of industrialization; Gibbon, to fears about maintaining the empire. Besides illuminating the salient issues of the day, Damrosch characterizes with sharp insight his many protagonists: abstemious Johnson, who likely would be diagnosed with depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder today; womanizing, hard-drinking Boswell, an unsuccessful lawyer with "unquenchable confidence," intelligent, but "no intellectual," whose mood swings indicate that he may have been bipolar. Although Damrosch emphasizes the men and their works, he does not neglect the women in their lives: memoirist Hester Thrale, for one, who offered Johnson "crucial emotional support" as his confidante and therapist and novelist and diarist Fanny Burney.Late-18th-century Britain comes brilliantly alive in a vibrant intellectual history.

        COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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    • English

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