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Juliet Barker

    Juliet R. V. Barker is a historian with a deep focus on medieval history and literary biography. Her scholarship delves into the lives and works of significant figures, particularly exploring the Brontë family and the intricacies of medieval tournaments. Barker employs meticulous research and analytical rigor to illuminate the complexities of the past for her readers. Her writing provides insightful perspectives into the literary and historical contexts that shaped her subjects.

    William Wordsworth. A Life in Letters
    The Brontës
    Violin Making
    The Brontes: A Life in Letters
    • Violin Making

      • 128 pages
      • 5 hours of reading
      4.2(12)Add rating

      Comprehensive yet practical guide to this most beautiful of crafts. Aimed at amateurs, students of violin making and woodworkers. Takes you through the delicate and precise techniques, and brings the art of violin making within the reach of all. Superbly illustrated with nearly 200 colour photographs and clear step-by-step instructions. Juliet Barker is a violinmaker, teacher and musician with over forty years' experience. New in paperback for 2022.

      Violin Making
    • The Brontës

      • 1024 pages
      • 36 hours of reading

      The story of the tragic Bronte family is familiar to everyone: we all know about that half-mad , repressive father, the drunken, drug-addicted wastrel of a brother, wild romantic Emily, unrequited Anne and 'poor Charlotte'. Or do we?

      The Brontës
    • William Wordsworth. A Life in Letters

      • 384 pages
      • 14 hours of reading
      3.8(10)Add rating

      William Wordsworth is usually remembered as the quintessential Victorian Poet Laureate: a dull, worthy, establishment figure, with impeccable middle class, Tory, Anglican credentials, whose moralistic poetry has been required reading for generations of yawning school children. Yet there is so much more to Wordsworth than Daffodils and The Prelude. This selection of letters and autobiographical fragments introduces us to the real Wordsworth: the rebellious schoolboy, who vandalised his family portraits, became a supporter of the French Revolution and fathered an illegitimate daughter in France; the radical poet whose flouting of the conventions of the day attracted the ridicule of the reviewers and forced him to endure thirty years of rejection, obscurity and financial hardship before achieving belated critical and popular success; the devoted brother, husband and father who could still write passionate love letters to his wife after ten years of marriage and the birth of five children; and, finally, the revered patriarch whose poetry formed the hearts and minds of a generation, whose opinions were sought by writers, politicians, churchmen and educationalists throughout the English speaking world, but who thought nothing of vaulting walls, skating on the Lakes or climbing Helvellyn even in his seventies.

      William Wordsworth. A Life in Letters