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ISBN: HB: 9780300195545

Yale University Press

August 2013

224 pp.

20.3x12.7 cm

HB:
£18,99
QTY:

Categories:

Memoirs of Walter Bagehot

Walter Bagehot (1826-1877) was a prominent Victorian lawyer, businessman, essayist and journalist. For 17 years he was editor of The Economist, and to this day the magazine includes a weekly "Bagehot" column. His analyses of politics, economics and public affairs were nothing short of brilliant. Sadly, he left no memoir. How, then, does this book bear the title, The Memoirs of Walter Bagehot? Frank Prochaska explains, "Given my longstanding interest in Bagehot's life and times, I decided to compose a memoir on his behalf". And so, in this imaginative reconstruction of the memoir Bagehot might have written, Prochaska assumes his subject's voice, draws on his extensive writings (Bagehot's Collected Works fill 15 volumes), and scrupulously avoids what Bagehot considered that most unpardonable of faults – dullness. A faux autobiography allows for considerable licence, but Prochaska remains true to Bagehot's character and accurate in his depiction of the times. The memoir immerses us in the spirit of the Victorian era and makes us wish to have known Walter Bagehot. He is, Prochaska observes, the Victorian with whom we would most want to have dinner.

About the Author

Frank Prochaska, the author of more than a dozen books, has taught, researched, and published British history throughout his career. He is honorary fellow, Institute of Historical Research, London University, and fellow of the Royal Historical Society. He lives in Oxford.

Reviews

"[Prochaska] has done a remarkable job... What he has accomplished is a quiet tour de force, often tightening and (if it is permitted to say so) improving on the original... Frank Prochaska has shone an agreeable and revelatory light upon this great Victorian writer by an artful deployment of literary mirrors, not lanterns. 'The Memoirs of Walter Bagehot' is a testimony not only to his command of the Bagehot oeuvre but also to his deep understanding of Bagehot's curious place in the pantheon of that endangered species, the man of letters" – Roger Kimball, Literary Review