Reviews

The Hidden History of the Holidays by Hannah Harvey

mugglemom's review

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3.0

Lots of good info - many tidbits I have heard over the years and a few that I hadn't. Thought the Cinco De Mayo was enlightening!

heather_foster's review

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5.0

Loved listening to this audiobook. She’s a great story teller and the information was interesting. I highly recommend it.

omnivorous's review

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2.0

While the author/narrator is certainly entertaining, I am left suspecting the veracity of everything she says.

So here's my issue: I only listened to the first three chapters. I listened to those chapters at 2.25x speed and while halfway absorbed in something else. Despite this, I still noticed two factual inaccuracies.

1) Julius Caesar did not name the month of August after himself. It was named after Augustus in 8 BC (well after Julius Caesar's death). I realize she was telling a joke, but this is a lecture series. Her jokes still need to be accurate.

2) "The Twelve Days of Christmas" was not written as a mnemonic device meant to help persecuted Catholic children learn their catechism. Hannah Harvey says, "there are several Catholic connections for the song. The one you may be most familiar with is that, because at this time in history Catholics were under persecution in England, the song served as a symbolic catechism for remembering your faith. God is the true love and the symbols are as follows." She then goes on to list the supposed symbols in the rest of the song. Snopes says she's wrong: https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/twelve-days-christmas/

This second error is far more egregious than the first since it is a key topic in her lesson: Christmas Carols and Traditions. Yet she spouts it off as fact alongside everything else. This audiobook is a lecture in the Great Courses series. The listener expects Hannah Harvey's information to be accurate. They expect her to be an authority on the subject; she obviously isn't.

Finding two errors while casually listening to this audiobook left me certain there were more. Sure enough, another reviewer noted a third error. Hannah Harvey says, "there's a famous story about how during World War I there was a time of truce at Christmas. And American soldiers heard German carols wafting over the cold night air." Problem? The Christmas truce was in 1914. The United States didn't enter the war until 1917. Perhaps British soldiers heard these carols; it's exceedingly unlikely that American ones did.

So there's three errors in the first 3 of 19 lessons. I'm certain there are many more.

sarah_speaks's review

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informative medium-paced

3.5

dragonwriter's review

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informative reflective slow-paced

3.5

ito_ed's review

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adventurous informative relaxing fast-paced

5.0

stasibabi's review

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medium-paced

3.5

elvishmerecat's review

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informative slow-paced

3.5

t_bun's review

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informative

3.5

nytephoenyx's review

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informative slow-paced

3.0

The Hidden History of the Holidays was... fine.  Just fine. As an historian, I was expecting more of a deep dive, but in all fairness, the lecturer warned me right at the beginning of the course that she is a storyteller. For the most part, my experience with the Great Courses has been in purely history (and one science...) courses taught by professors at-or-near the top of their field. This one took a different angle.

Because I do have some knowledge of history, I knew quickly that some of the explanations she gave were extremely oversimplified. For example, in discussing Mardi Gras, she completely breezed past the varied and rich history of Carnival in the Caribbean islands and why Carnival reached there in the first place. In talking about Day of the Dead, she mentioned Viking funerals which are much more pop culture than history. So as far as actual historical accuracy goes... I learned quickly to take this with a grain of salt.

I will say for the completely uninitiated, The Hidden History of the Holidays provides insight into some possible influences and origins of modern American Holidays (and, yes, this is strictly limited to the United States). It's interesting but only scrapes the surface and is told like a story (sound effects and all at times) rather than a deep dive into the origins. It feels like a hearth tale, or campfire history and should be taken loosely as such.  Interesting, but definitely lost me in some of the presentation methods and lack of complete accuracy.

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