Wednesday, 23 September 2009

FACTUAL REVIEW: The Hidden Treasures of England - Michael McNay

BOOK BLURB:

Stonehenge, the Tower of London, York Minster, Longleat – all familiar, all among England's most visited places. But what about the wonderful Roman villa at Lullingstone in Kent? Or Manchester Town Hall, with its stunning Victorian murals? Or the medieval sculpture at Lanercost Priory in Cumbria. All equally rewarding, all far too easily overlooked.

In Hidden Treasures Michael McNay pays tribute to England's less well-known gems, highlighting the astonishing masterpieces to be found scattered across the length and breadth of the country. In some cases it may be an entire building that draws his attention, but more often than not it is a particular object or highlight – a painting hidden away in a corner of a stately home, perhaps; magnificent stained glass in an otherwise unremarkable church; a seventeenth-century statue standing on a bleak urban roundabout; a medieval bridge everyone uses but no one stops to looks at. It may be the one thing worth seeing in a rather unpromising village. It may, just as easily, be jostling for attention among better-known tourist sites in the middle of a busy city. Whatever it is, each object or building is lovingly described, and its history given, along with a sense of how it fits in to the story of art and architecture in England.

For those already familiar with particular places, Hidden Treasures offers an alternative itinerary. For those who dislike crowds, it shows how to leave the tourist trail well behind. And for those who want to stop and look rather than simply glance, it shows where and how to look.


REVIEW:

From childhood I fondly remember days out in my local area to see everything from local museums through to ancient landscape features. It was interesting although after a certain amount of time you’ve pretty much seen everything that your locale has to offer and wonder where to go next. Well wonder no more. Within McNay’s offering is a whole host of days out with things of interest to keep everyone glued as well as generating a bit of local history for the reader. Organised by counties and then alphabetically it’s a great way to find each place with some of the hidden treasures that even the local’s may not know too much about. A real gem of a find and one that will more than pay for itself when I start taking my nephew to some of these attractions.

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