I am reading Bill Bryson's Notes from a Small Island again, 6 years after reading it for the first time.
This time I decided to check online pictures of some of the places he visited to see if they were really as bad as he describes. I was shocked to find that many fine places were badly berated for reasons that I cannot grasp.
In chapter 18, Bryson depicts the Victoria Gardens Shopping Centre in Harrogate as "just heartbreakingly awful, the worst kind of pastiche architecture - a sort of Bath Crescent meets Crystal Palace with a roof by McDonald's". Now have a look at the place and tell me if you agree. It looks quite nice to me. In fact, I wish all shopping centres could be as handsome and respectful the the city's traditional architectural style.
In chapter 15, Mr Bryson had complained about the University Arms Hotel in Cambridge as being "an overpriced modern block", further adding "my gloomy room was lamentably at odds with its description in my guidebook". I suppose there is only one hotel of the same name in Cambridge, and that would be this Victorian palace (you can see a room on Booking.com). Now I have read enough books by Bill Bryson to know that he is rather on the stingy side, often arguing for a few pounds or dollars. On his journeys across the USA, he always seems to be staying at dingy motels where the TV doesn't always work and things fall apart. In light of all this what could possibly be wrong with the 4-star, historic University Arms Hotel ?
Bill Bryson's books are fun to read (I read almost all of them), but it is prudent not to take his comments too seriously. He is often quite unreliable when it comes to facts. I already explained his linguistics shortcomings in his history of the English language, The Mother Tongue.
Still in Notes from a Small Island, Bryson devotes the first pages of chapter 16 to explaining the basics of British aristocracy. He starts off with (a bit cockily IMHO), "If you have always been confused by why some people in Britain are called Sir This while others are Lord That, and others are the Earl of Such and Such or Viscount Something or Other, worry not, I'm here to help you". The problem is that he never comes to explaining that 'Sir' is used for the gentry (Baronets, Knights, Lairds, Untitled Nobility), while 'Lord' is used for the peerage (from Barons to Dukes). I am also surprised that nobody noticed a gross mistake on p. 163 on my already corrected edition reprinted in 2001. Bryson writes "Altogether some forty thousand lordly titles are in use in Britain, but the actual number of nobles is only a tiny fraction of that - a little under twelve hundred, or barely 0.2 percent of the British population". It doesn't take a genius to immediately realise that 1200 is not 0.2% of 60 million ! It is 0.002%. But, numbers apart, the sentence isn't even correct. He should have said "nobility titles" and not "lordly titles" as a "lordly title" would exclude the more numerous Baronets, Knights and so on. All of them are nobles though. What he meant is that only a tiny fraction of them are peers (with a seat at the House of Lords). Not terribly impressive for someone who intentionally spared three whole pages to "help us" understand the intricacies of the British nobility.
This time I decided to check online pictures of some of the places he visited to see if they were really as bad as he describes. I was shocked to find that many fine places were badly berated for reasons that I cannot grasp.
In chapter 18, Bryson depicts the Victoria Gardens Shopping Centre in Harrogate as "just heartbreakingly awful, the worst kind of pastiche architecture - a sort of Bath Crescent meets Crystal Palace with a roof by McDonald's". Now have a look at the place and tell me if you agree. It looks quite nice to me. In fact, I wish all shopping centres could be as handsome and respectful the the city's traditional architectural style.
In chapter 15, Mr Bryson had complained about the University Arms Hotel in Cambridge as being "an overpriced modern block", further adding "my gloomy room was lamentably at odds with its description in my guidebook". I suppose there is only one hotel of the same name in Cambridge, and that would be this Victorian palace (you can see a room on Booking.com). Now I have read enough books by Bill Bryson to know that he is rather on the stingy side, often arguing for a few pounds or dollars. On his journeys across the USA, he always seems to be staying at dingy motels where the TV doesn't always work and things fall apart. In light of all this what could possibly be wrong with the 4-star, historic University Arms Hotel ?
Bill Bryson's books are fun to read (I read almost all of them), but it is prudent not to take his comments too seriously. He is often quite unreliable when it comes to facts. I already explained his linguistics shortcomings in his history of the English language, The Mother Tongue.
Still in Notes from a Small Island, Bryson devotes the first pages of chapter 16 to explaining the basics of British aristocracy. He starts off with (a bit cockily IMHO), "If you have always been confused by why some people in Britain are called Sir This while others are Lord That, and others are the Earl of Such and Such or Viscount Something or Other, worry not, I'm here to help you". The problem is that he never comes to explaining that 'Sir' is used for the gentry (Baronets, Knights, Lairds, Untitled Nobility), while 'Lord' is used for the peerage (from Barons to Dukes). I am also surprised that nobody noticed a gross mistake on p. 163 on my already corrected edition reprinted in 2001. Bryson writes "Altogether some forty thousand lordly titles are in use in Britain, but the actual number of nobles is only a tiny fraction of that - a little under twelve hundred, or barely 0.2 percent of the British population". It doesn't take a genius to immediately realise that 1200 is not 0.2% of 60 million ! It is 0.002%. But, numbers apart, the sentence isn't even correct. He should have said "nobility titles" and not "lordly titles" as a "lordly title" would exclude the more numerous Baronets, Knights and so on. All of them are nobles though. What he meant is that only a tiny fraction of them are peers (with a seat at the House of Lords). Not terribly impressive for someone who intentionally spared three whole pages to "help us" understand the intricacies of the British nobility.
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