Dinner with Joseph Johnson
Books and Friendship in a Revolutionary Age
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- £5.99
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- £5.99
Publisher Description
*Longlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize*
In late eighteenth-century London, a group of extraordinary people gathered around a dining table once a week.
The host was Joseph Johnson, publisher and bookseller and he was joined at dinner by a shifting constellation of great minds including William Blake, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Wordsworth, Henry Fuseli, Anna Barbauld and Mary Wollstonecraft.
Johnson's years as a maker of books saw profound change in Britain and abroad. In this remarkable portrait of a revolutionary age, Daisy Hay captures a changing nation through the stories of the men and women who wrote it into being, and whose ideas still influence us today.
'Rich in period and personal detail' Guardian
'Hugely engrossing' Sunday Times
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this illuminating account, Hay (Young Romantics), a literature professor at the University of Exeter, sheds light on the far-reaching impact of the dinners hosted by Joseph Johnson at St. Paul's Churchyard from 1760 to 1809. An influential bookseller, Johnson befriended, hosted, and published many of the era's defining artists and thinkers, including William Blake, Erasmus Darwin, Joseph Priestley, and Mary Wollstonecraft, as well as painter Henry Fuseli. Hay offers a window into what went on in Johnson's dining room and outside of it; some of what she covers is well-known, including the Priestley Riots and Priestley's exile from Britain. But the real value of Hay's account is in the small, humanizing stories she recounts. For instance, Wollstonecraft, who described Johnson as "a father and brother," castigated him for interfering in her interest in Fuseli—later, Johnson would be a chief supporter of Wollstonecraft. As Hay points out, Johnson's main attribute was kindness, and his considerable role in the intellectual development of Britain was the result of "the kinship of friends who catch each other when they fall." Hay's is a fascinating take on the intellectual and political development of the time. Fans of literary history will relish this opportunity to pull up a seat at Johnson's table.