Stella Tillyard's Aristocrats has set out from its publishers with claims beyond even what one expects of conventional hype. There is much to admire in the book, particularly the industry that must have gone into its compilation: the examination of huge family archives which contain, apart from what one might expect in the way of letters and journals, everything from death certificates to poems. There is much to enjoy too, as there would be in any lively historical novel, past or present. But the eulogy pronounced by the great Simon Schama, author of Citizens, calls for comment: 'A dazzling achievement,' he writes, 'an extraordinary story told by a phenomenally gifted writer'. This strikes me as over-ecstatic.
LRB 9 June 1994 | PDF Download
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