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Johnson’s Life of London

The People Who Made the City That Made the World

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Johnson’s Life of London

By: Boris Johnson
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About this listen

London is special. For centuries, it has been amongst the greatest cities of the world. But a city is nothing without its people. This sparkling new history of London, told through a relay-race of great Londoners shows in one, personality-packed book that the ingenuity, diversity, creativity and enterprise of London are second to none.

Boris Johnson believes that in order to understand London one has to know about its past. The heart and spirit of London lies in its people, in the range of its cultures. Through its diversity and energy, London provides an environment which empowers people to create, the impetus to invent. Boris Johnson’s new book explores this cross current of influences between Westminster and the City, between the politicians and the wealth creators, over many centuries .

JOHNSON’S LIFE OF LONDON – a fitting tribute of course to one of the greatest Londoners –celebrates many of the characters who have made this city great. Boris’s book provides a chronological story of London but is written in the form of a relay race of biographies – some very famous figures, some more obscure. He ranges from the Romans to one of the author’s predecessors as mayor, Dick Whittington; from John Wilkes (a strong upholder of the freedom of the press) to J.W. Turner; from Chaucer to Gandhi, and through to modern times.

Boris Johnson writes with wit and erudition, providing the reader with delightful insights. The book discovers London as none of us have seen it before and the journey is exhilarating and surprising .

Europe Great Britain Historical Politicians Politics & Activism Politics & Government United States World

Critic reviews

Praise for ‘The Dream of Rome’:

‘Written with all the wit and zest that have helped to make him Britain’s favourite celebrity MP.’ Tom Holland, Daily Telegraph

‘Johnson has not been intimidated by dry classics masters: his style is bright, breezy, populist and pacy.’ The Times

‘Described with his special combination of sharp-eyed intelligence and golly-gosh exclamation…a splendid romp through the Roman world.’ Sunday Telegraph

‘Lovers of Latin and ancient history unite! At long last there is a warm, funny, erudite introduction to the Roman empire…a marvellous reader-friendly account of Rome.’ Independent

‘History comes alive only when written from the heart and Johnson’s is full of swashbuckling japes, bloodthirsty yells and energetic sideswipes.’ Craig Brown, Mail on Sunday

All stars
Most relevant
Some parts are a lot more interesting than others. Boris has a magpie sensibility which hones in on certain sparkly individuals and ignores everyone else. He has soft spots for Robert Hooke and John Wilkes of the 17th and 18th centuries, whom he focuses on to the detriment of everyone else alive at the time. The 75 minutes spent just on John Wilkes was immensely tedious after the first 20 minutes. I felt a bit like a tourist who was persuaded to visit several worthy sites when I'd rather have been walking round more entertaining venues. Altogether a bit of a mish-mash.

Boris only reads a very few bits at the beginning and the end, giving the impression that he just turned up for the first day of recording. So one star off for that, and another deducted for my pet hate of lazily chopping the audiobook into 20 minutes chunks rather than proper chapters.

Bit of a mish-mash - like London itself

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I have so enjoyed this book...what a very clever, eloquent man is Boris Johnson. This should be required reading in all schools! So proud of him and our beloved London!

Fantastic

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This is an entertaining and informative book - which you would expect considering the author’s standing. However there were a few chapters which I fast forwarded. I was keen to learn of the social, economic, religious and political developments of London.
There was not enough emphasis on this as the author tended to focus on biographies of individuals. Whilst relevant, they were over long and failed to add to the chronological detail which makes a book like this worthwhile.

Some digressions which detract from the overall narrative

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Really interesting and enjoyable 'read' about the history and culture of London. Really enjoyed this book.

Great read

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Unfortunately, a new narrator steps into mr Johnson's shoes after a short while and takes over -- and this narrator, while acceptably entertaining, lacks the passion that Boris so clearly has.

I quite liked listening to the sound of Boris thumbing his way through the book too -- you could literally hear the pages being turned in the background.

The book is good, the story is good -- but the chapters seem to start in the wrong areas, and as such, the audio-splitting is a bit out of whack.

I haven't finished this yet, but if Boris doesn't come back and continue in his own quirky style, then I'm afraid it may have to go back.

Strange really, as he is now our PM, and I'm absolutely no Tory -- but I can still appreciate his talents even if we don't match politically.

Only partially read by Boris

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