A fascinating history of the changing - and enduring - beliefs about death, and what lies beyond.
Born and bred in Warwickshire, Carl Watkins read history at Cambridge, where he is now lecturer in medieval history and a fellow of Magdalene College. He writes about belief and has published on the history of ghosts, the afterlife, saints and folklore. His first book, History and the Supernatural in Medieval England, was published by CUP in 2007, and he has contributed to a forthcoming Cambridge history of medieval England. He has also appeared on Radio 3's Night Waves, in a number of programmes for Radio 4's series The Long View and on a number of television documentaries. He lives in Cambridge.
A first-class study of British attitudes to death and dying from
the Middle Ages to the 20th century... A fascinating work of social
history that is both scholarly and accessible to general
readers
*Financial Times*
Watkins has a gift for conveying a feeling of place, and is good at
conjuring up the dead, lifting the veil so that we can have a peek
into the grave and beyond
*Good Book Guide*
Outstanding ... This may be a book about death but, paradoxically,
it is one filled with intelligence and life
*Sunday Times*
Superbly written, shows how the meaning of life is still everywhere
connected to what it means to die
*Financial Times*
A sensitive and fascinating history of an "undiscovered country"
which, in many ways, mirrors the story of Britain
*Sunday Telegraph*
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