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BOOK OF DAYS

A delightful history of the French peasantry and working class as told through visual culture.

Awards & Accolades

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Bullis surveys a millennium of daily life in France in this nonfiction book.

In 1975, the author stumbled upon the remains of a disassembled early twentieth century scrapbook that detailed the lives of the ostensibly mundane Lefief family. Sold to Bullis at a French flea market as generic historical ephemera, the materials would have almost certainly been lost to history had the author not clumsily stepped on a 1905 photograph of Jacques and Marie-Claire Lefief. Feeling guilty over his faux pas, he purchased the remains of the small Lefief family archive. As with most members of France’s poor and working classes, there is little recorded history of the Lefiefs, but the author’s accidental discovery sparked a half-century of research and rumination upon fundamental questions of history that form the basis of this book. Contrasted with “the narratives of traditional history,” which prioritize the written records that document the lives of elites, this book uses images, from tapestries of the Middle Ages to the photographs found in the Lefief family scrapbook, to focus on “everyday life” in France from 1003 to 1975. Each chapter focuses on a single day in the life of a fictionalized member of the Lefief family from the 11th through 20th centuries. Prioritizing pictorial representations over textual sources, the book begins with the Bayeux Tapestry. An artistic masterpiece of medieval France, the tapestry is more than 200 feet long and depicts key moments of Normandy’s royal and military history. Its margins, however, illustrate the experiences and lives of common people from northern Europe seldom addressed in written histories. Through Bullis’ perceptive eye, readers are told (and shown) how soldiers cooked their meat, built their ships, and interacted with local peasants. Similar “mundane details of daily life” later made their way into the Book of Days of the 1400s through 1600s. While funded by wealthy patrons for religious purposes, the artisans who produced these works often included detailed images of “how common villagers and rural rustics lived at the time.” The text includes a keen analysis of religious sacramentals (from rosaries to depictions of baptisms) and what they reveal about the experiences of people in the era in which they were produced.

A skilled author of more than a dozen nonfiction works, Bullis is particularly adept at blending learned analysis and research with an engaging writing style that has appeal to both general readers as well as scholars of European history. And while purists may balk at its fictionalized Lefief characters, the book’s historical rigor is backed by an impressive citation schema that includes ample hyperlinks for e-readers. The narrative’s emphasis on appealing to a broad readership is evident in the high-quality, full-color images that adorn nearly every page, including reproductions of historical artifacts, maps, paintings, and photographs. The text also challenges readers to ask serious questions about the nature of history—particularly the ever present query among archivists, genealogists, and historians: “What part of the past is worth preserving and what may be forgotten?” This is a superb example of how to write both longue durée and “history from below.”

A delightful history of the French peasantry and working class as told through visual culture.

Pub Date: N/A

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 270

Publisher: Manuscript

Review Posted Online: May 30, 2023

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A PERSONAL DEVIL

A host of well-drawn characters and a mass of historical detail make this 12th-century adventure entertaining despite its...

In all of Southwark, there's no more skilled saddlemaker than Master Mainard, married to shrewish Bertrild but deeply in love with Sabina, the blind whore who lives in the Old Priory Guesthouse, a brothel run by beautiful Magdalene la Bâtarde (A Mortal Bane, 1999). Mainard has installed Sabina in his home, but it seems to all the better part of discretion for Sabina to return to the Guesthouse after Bertrild is found stabbed to death in the back yard. Ensconced in the Old Priory, Sir Bellamy of Itchen (commonly called Bell), an emissary of the Bishop of Winchester and Magdalene's besotted admirer, is attempting to find Bertrild's killer. At length Bell reduces the list of likely suspects to the five men who ply their trade in the area of Mainard's workshop, from which the murder weapon had been stolen. But Bell's investigation is further complicated by the news that Bertrild had been doing a thriving business in blackmail; by a second killing; and by the arrival of Bertrild's uncle Sir Druerie, with his own decided ideas about the murderer's identity.

A host of well-drawn characters and a mass of historical detail make this 12th-century adventure entertaining despite its hopelessly confusing mishmash of a plot.

Pub Date: March 1, 2001

ISBN: 0-312-86998-3

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Forge

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2001

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THE MYSTERY OF MARY ROGERS

Distinguished by a keen sense of period detail and sharp pacing: Geary serves his subject with dignity and grace.

The author/illustrator of Jack the Ripper (1995) continues to focus on Victorian crime in this latest historical comic, part of a series on 19th-century murder, based on a true-life story so compelling it inspired a short story by Edgar Allan Poe. While Poe was intrigued by the philosophy of detection in the case, Geary’s apparent interest lies in its revelations about urban lowlife of mid–19th-century New York City. His thick-lined black-and-white narrative, with its loose, curvy edges and distinctive bulbous lettering, well suits this historical curiosity. Geary’s well-researched book recounts the mysterious death of Mary Rogers, a young single woman who lived with her mother near present-day City Hall. When her corpse washed up on the western side of the Hudson River, many journalists became fascinated by the possible reasons for her fate. Was she an innocent, brutally murdered by one of the boarders at her mother’s house? Was she killed by a jealous lover or by one of the many male admirers who patronized the tobacco store where she worked? Or was it a botched abortion? These questions captured the imagination of the contemporary public and press because, in Geary’s view, Mary’s story was a powerful cautionary tale of emerging city life, which the artist illuminates in many sidebar historical drawings. Unsolved in part because of the period’s inadequate forensic techniques, the story becomes “a testament to the unknown and unknowable,” and Geary’s visual airiness perfectly captures the mysteriousness at its core. This is certainly a far cry from his early work for National Lampoon and Heavy Metal.

Distinguished by a keen sense of period detail and sharp pacing: Geary serves his subject with dignity and grace.

Pub Date: May 1, 2001

ISBN: 1-56163-274-0

Page Count: 80

Publisher: NBM

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2001

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