desperance: (Default)
[personal profile] desperance
Whoops. I have been cheerfully reading Adam Hart-Davis' What the Victorians Did for Us as a piece of casual research (for the steampunky stories about the barber-surgeon-spy who shaved Half-Emperor Cyrrhenius): the book is a coffee-table tie-in to a TV series, so deep it isn't. But superficial can also be instructive, especially if you can treat it as reliable; one thing for sure, Hart-Davis knows more than I do. In and of himself, he does, and I'm sure he has researchers also turning up book-suitable facts.

Three chapters in, I hit what is almost the first fact that I know independently - and it's wrong.

"Cholera was especially frightening, because it was a new disease. The first case, apparently brought from India, appeared in Newcastle in 1831..."

Sunderland, damn it! Sunderland!

(For a rather wonderful novel about the outbreak, see Sheri Holman's The Dress Lodger. Written by an American who had never been to Sunderland, but that's okay, we ain't proud...)

(no subject)

Date: 2009-01-29 04:25 am (UTC)
ellarien: Blue/purple pansy (Default)
From: [personal profile] ellarien
That makes sense, but my parents used to drink it that way too -- maybe with a bit more coffee and a bit less sugar than I got at age seven. There was also 'half-and-half' (half milk and half water heated together in the pan), as consumed by my mother for breakfast most mornings even now.

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