Ostensibly about the house/home that Bryson lives in, in England, but, like a lot of his writing, it uses this premise to wander off exploring all sorts of things - history, geography, sociology. Full of lots of obscure information, so you always learn something new. No requirement to read in one sitting - a good book to read a bit of now and then.

I libri di Bryson sono sempre una gioia, una miniera di aneddoti assurdi e interessanti condita da una dose abbondante di ironia.

In questo caso, prendendo spunto dalla vecchia casa in cui abita nella campagna inglese, nata come canonica per un facoltoso curato, decide di parlare di una miriade di argomenti legati alla vita delle persone nel corso degli ultimi secoli, più o meno collegati alle varie stanze-capitoli che prende in esame.

Dal tema più ampio di come fossero le case in Inghilterra dalla fine dell'occupazione romana al tempo presente ad argomenti molto più ristretti e specifici come la moda delle parrucche e le sostanze velenose delle quali le persone abusavano allegramente per rendersi più presentabili e attraenti mettendo a rischio la loro stessa sopravvivenza.
Si spazia dall'architettura all'ingegneria, dalle invenzioni che hanno cambiato la vita nelle case a quelle che hanno cambiato il mondo intero -cambiando di riflesso anche la vita delle persone e quindi il modo in cui interpretavano la vita domestica-, dai rapporti in famiglia ai rapporti con la servitù. I cibi, le malattie, la medicina, il giardinaggio e i parchi, la mobilia.

Alcuni capitoli hanno un collegamento davvero risicato con la stanza da cui teoricamente partono, ma la cosa viene dimenticata abbastanza velocemente, mentre Bryson ci accompagna a giro tra Inghilterra e America, tra diciottesimo, diciannovesimo e ventesimo secolo.
Bryson è una garanzia, si può prendere sempre a occhi chiusi!
informative slow-paced

Clever tour of history through the various rooms of a house.

Finally got there! Woop! And once I was into it, this was just as fascinating, witty and informative as anything else Bryson has written.

There's a lot of interesting stuff in here but I didn't really think it was a history of private life. More like a history of wacky, unknown people (mostly men, almost all British or American) who did or didn't get very rich inventing something. Sooooo, kinda boring, in other words. I wish more of the book had been like the part about paint, detailing what colors people liked in the past and how they put all sorts of dangerous chemicals in paint to achieve the color effects they wanted.

I suppose that kind of book would be boring to other people, though.

I found this book to be absolutely fascinating! I really loved the idea/content of the book. Sometimes I expected to learn more about the actual history of how rooms came about, rather than society as a whole, but it was still very informative and interesting. I already want to read it again.

Zgodovina človeštva niso samo kralji in kraljice, meje, vojne, diktatorji in politika. Je tudi pripoved o stvareh in navadah, ki so del našega vsakdanjika in našega doma. Higiena, otroštvo, razsvetljava, prehrana, vse to se nam danes zdi samoumevno, niti slučajno pa ni bilo vedno tako. Bryson je mojster brskanja po času in pripovedovanja zgodb o vsakdanjiku na tako zanimiv način, da mu lahko zavidajo še diktatorji in kralji.
informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

Maybe I am deluding myself by thinking that I enjoy Bill Bryson or these mass comprehensive books that touch in everything but also nothing. With this book, I was expecting something entirely different in term of the topic covered. The use of the word "home" and "private life" are misleading, this is more about the physical house and everything within from staircases to the many tangents made. I was expecting and hoping for something that looked at homes and the ways in people actually live. For example, a history of domesticity or the family unit, how that varies across borders or traditions that people have in different cultures. It did end with a brief mention of climate change though and I used one of the random things mentioned in conversation later that day. Although, I can't remember what now...