Subscribe now for full access and no adverts

REVIEW BY ALISTAIR FAIR
Simon Jenkins’ Short History of British Architecture ranges over several thousand years of cathedrals, castles, and grand buildings. Jenkins enjoys a good example and a memorable phrase. Inevitably in a survey, there is some unevenness, with Jenkins’ definition of ‘architecture’ and his interest in style sidelining the vernacular. More fundamentally, Scotland is skimmed over and ‘English’ is sometimes elided with ‘British’. The final part of the book sees Jenkins open fire on 20th-century Modernism – with some inaccuracies when it comes to the post-war new towns and housing drive. Jenkins concludes by arguing for better public understanding of design – a good aim. His account certainly offers a panorama of buildings, designers, and styles, but one hopes that readers will also think about the experience of space and place, the nature of materials, and the networks of people and ideas which together create the built environment.
A Short History of British Architecture: From Stonehenge to the Shard
Simon Jenkins
Penguin, £26.99
ISBN 978-0241674956
Just Out and Coming Soon
Wortes and All: medieval cooking
Emma Kay
Amberley, £15.99
ISBN 978-1398110991
Cremation in the Early Middle Ages
Howard Williams and Femke Lippok
Sidestone Press, £50
ISBN 978-9464270990
Beneath Our Feet: everyday discoveries reshaping history
Michael Lewis and Ian Richardson
Thames & Hudson, £30
ISBN 978-0500027523
Close to the Edge: excavations of five Cornish coastal barrows
Andy M Jones
Archaeopress, £40
ISBN 978-1803278155
People, Prehistory and the Past: essays in honour of John Waddell
Michelle Comber and Kieran O’Conor (eds)
Four Courts Press, £50
ISBN 978-1801511643
Lordship and Landscape in East Anglia AD 400-800
Christopher Scull, Stuart Brookes, and Tom Williamson (eds)
Society of Antiquaries of London, £50
ISBN 978-0854313075
A Medieval Life: William de Felton and Edlingham Castle, 1260-1327
Graham Fairclough
Windgather Press, £49.95
ISBN 978-1914427435
