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House in Little Chelsea
House in Little Chelsea | Clare Hastings
2 posts | 1 read | 6 to read
This fascinating book imagines the lives of the inhabitants of 53 Finborough Road, in London's 'Little Chelsea', from 1871, when it was built, to the outbreak of the Second World War. The house is still standing (occupied, in fact, by the author), though the world described here has all but vanished. Detailed in the census records and other sources, these very real residents -ranging from bodice-makers, by way of booksellers (and a bigamist), to a glamorous, though unemployed, Irish barrister - are all now long gone, but their footsteps are etched into the floorboards at Finborough Road and their hopes, frustrations and joys are locked forever into the history of the house. Clare Hastings brings to life the story of this rather ordinary London house and the people who lived there in a vivid blend of social history and fiction. The House in Little Chelsea combines humour, warmth and compelling storytelling and is perhaps reminiscent of George and Weedon Grossmith's Diary of a Nobody.
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Reviewsbylola
House in Little Chelsea | Clare Hastings
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I read 11 books this month. It‘s a little less than usual—our vacation as well as two chunksters (I‘m 2/3 thru The Grapes of Wrath right now) helped bring down my total.

I read 8 physical books
2 audiobooks
1 ebook

Gissy Wow! Congratulations!👏👏👏👏 5y
111 likes1 comment
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Reviewsbylola
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Pickpick

This is a beautiful book that I came across in London. The author lives in a home in Chelsea and tracks down the census records for most of the home‘s history. She then created a narrative for some of the families with the house as the focal point. The stories were fun to read and I loved watching the house evolve.

The endpapers are the actual census records.

Debdeb I love the idea of how this was written!! How utterly creative! Will add that to my tbr list 😊 5y
Reviewsbylola I thought so too! It made me curious about my own house, which is only about 70 years old. @Debdeb 5y
Debdeb Aw the census won‘t be out for your house yet then, you‘ll have to write a reminder for yourself in about 30 years time to check it out @Reviewsbylola 😀 5y
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Reviewsbylola I meant the auditor records/historical parcel sheets. 🤗 It‘s pretty cool, I was able to find the owners back until the 1920s, even though my house wasn‘t built until 1940 (a little bit earlier than I originally thought!). @debdeb 5y
LeahBergen This looks so good. 👍🏻 I owned a house built in 1912 and a very old man showed up one day, looking for the woman who lived there in the 1930s. 😭😭 My current house was built in 1928 and I met a man who grew up in it in the 1950s (he told me where he and his brother played and where their Christmas tree was and so on ❤️❤️). 5y
Debdeb @Reviewsbylola ah yes! I forgot about those! It‘ll be interesting to know if the land was part of a bigger estate earlier on. 5y
emilyhaldi Omg @LeahBergen that‘s so sweet now I‘m crying 😭 5y
Reviewsbylola Wow, that‘s so cool! @LeahBergen 5y
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