Publisher’s
write-up:
‘The
20th Century takes you from the last days of the vile Victorian
Queen right up to the nostalgic Nineties, with all the amazing changes and
incredible inventions that happened in between … and it’s not even over yet!
Want
to know:
·
Who shocked the world by showing her knickers?
·
How two monkeys and a dog became astronauts?
·
Why a posh London restaurant served stewed car?
From
the suffering Suffragettes to Bill and Ben, from Charlie Chaplin to Margaret
Thatcher, this is horrible history as you’ve never seen it before – because
you’re part of it! History has never been so horrible!’
The 20th Century is a part of
the Horrible Histories series written by Terry Deary, with this book being a
special edition. It contains a summary of the entire 20th Century,
covering one decade in each chapter.
This book contained elements of a typical
Horrible Histories book, with a timeline, interesting illustrations, diary
entries and also some excellent handpicked events – making history rather
interesting. My expectation on Horrible Histories novels have always been high,
as I’ve learnt more about World War II or Egyptian history from the Horrible
Histories novels than any history textbook and with that said, I’d have to say
that this supposed ‘special edition’ was rather disappointing.
First, it is not very wise to cover the
entire 20th Century in 176 pages and thus, the content was
inevitably less, very less, in fact. The author did bring out the gradual
transition in the way of life, pretty well, but it was mainly, only the British
way of life. Moreover, the author’s primary aim was only to make this book
interesting than informative – there were several interesting incidents
narrated by the author such as the story of Adrian Carton de Wiart or that of
Lucky Lord Lucan but they are not of much historical significance, in my
opinion, especially, the latter. Out of 176 pages, I guess a chunk of it was occupied
by the stories on the South Pole explorer Robert Scott and the next generation
Scotts (though I liked the anagram in Loch Ness’ scientific name Nessiteras
rhombopteryx).
To sum it up, I would have liked this book,
had there been a little change in the title of the book – ‘Britain during the
20th Century’. The Author mainly concentrated only on British
inventions, British achievements and British glories but it hardly went beyond
Britain (probably the cover story is the only aberration) and is best suited
for Brits who are interested in learning about their recent history. What I
understood after reading this is that Horrible Histories is more suited when it
is particular about something and not generic, like in the case of this book.
This is the first horrible histories book that I’m reviewing but it certainly
is not the first book of the series that I’ve read and after the expectations
those books had set, this disappointed me.
I’d give it a rating of 4/10.
Rating:
4/10
Have
a nice day,
Andy