The Victorians (Rees-Mogg book)

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The Victorians
AuthorJacob Rees-Mogg
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SubjectVictorian era
GenreBiography
PublisherPenguin Books
Publication date
23 May 2019
Pages464
ISBN978-0753548523
OCLC1104331999
941.081
Websiteat Penguin Books

The Victorians: Twelve Titans who Forged Britain is a 2019 biographical work by the Conservative politician Jacob Rees-Mogg, a backbencher at the time, in which he discusses twelve influential British figures of the Victorian period.

The book covers eleven men—Prince Albert, Disraeli, Palmerston, Robert Peel, Gladstone, Robert Napier, General Gordon, W. G. Grace, William Sleeman, Albert Dicey and Augustus Pugin—and one woman, Queen Victoria.

Reception

The book was subject to a largely negative critical reception.[1][2] Columnist A. N. Wilson called it "staggeringly silly" and "morally repellent",[3] while historian Richard J. Evans described it as "plodding, laborious, humourless and barely readable."[4]

It has been criticised for including only one woman, for failure to use primary sources, and on literary grounds. In her review, scholar of the Victorian period Kathryn Hughes wrote, "At least we know The Victorians isn't ghost written, since no self-respecting freelancer would dare ask for payment for such rotten prose".[2]

Dominic Sandbrook, reviewing the book for The Sunday Times, described it as "bad, boring and mind‑bogglingly banal".[5][6]

However, the historian Andrew Roberts described the book as "a full-throated, clear-sighted, well-researched and extremely well-written exposition of the Victorians and their values".[7]

References