

Black Gold
Author: Jeremy Paxman
Narrator: Jeremy Paxman
Unabridged: 12 hr 49 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: William Collins
Published: 09/30/2021
Author: Jeremy Paxman
Narrator: Jeremy Paxman
Unabridged: 12 hr 49 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: William Collins
Published: 09/30/2021
We can't understate coal’s importance in Britain’s modern history. And Jeremy Paxman has produced a colourful book explaining this. Britain, he points out, would never have become the world’s first industrial superpower were it not for coal. This black gold powered factories, ships, and railways. It......more
This is a very good, very informative and reasonably entertaining book. It sets out the history of the coal business in the UK, particularly concentrating on three aspects. Firstly the structure of the business, pointing out the many fingers in the pie, each adding to the cost of extraction and dist......more
An interesting history but ultimately I think my left wing biases clash too much with Paxman’s obvious right wing ones for me to rate it any higher.......more
This review first appeared on my blog - [URL not allowed] - on 5th November 2021. A fascinating chronicle of a vanished industry and a commodity which was once essential to every aspect of life in Britain. The history spans the opening of the first coal mines and finishes with the decline of t......more
Factual, engaging and alas sad, insomuch that whilst we now know the cost to the climate of coal usage that the country was built on the work in harsh conditions for many families. Paxman does take time to inject some lighter moments into the work.......more
‘[A] rich social history … Given coal’s image, a popular history might seem a foolhardy undertaking. Yet Paxman’s book could hardly be more colourful, and I enjoyed every page enormously … A mining community, as Paxman points out, was not just a place of dirt and danger. It was a “place where you slept and ate, visited the doctor, fell in love, had your children and entertained yourself” … One day soon, Paxman says, we may forget it was ever there. But his book does a fine job of bringing it alive, and deserves the widest possible readership’ ‘A rich seam of history … Coal made Britain top nation, but we don’t talk about it much … Much more than the story of an industry: it is a history of Britain from an unusual angle, vividly told, that throws new light on familiar features of our national landscape … Paxman’s fine narrative powers are at their best in his account of [miner’s strikes] … From its beginnings to its end, the industry that made our country what it is, for good and ill, was a brutal business. Paxman is determined that we should not forget it’ ‘[A] terrific history … Paxman is not afraid to call out poor behaviour … A rich seam for acerbic Paxman’ ‘A really interesting, timely book’ ‘The history of coal in Britain might not sound immediately gripping, but it was. Paxo brings it all to life – the men, women and children toiling in the dark, in conditions no one could endure today. The courage of those communities shines from every page’ ‘Filled with fun facts … Jeremy Paxman is particularly good at explaining why coal mattered so much. He has a sharp pen, and a good eye for detail’ ‘Paxman tells a good story and he doesn’t mind who knows it. Ebullient and condescending at the same time, he is particularly good on set pieces’