4.5
dark informative slow-paced

Thank you to Netgalley and Pen & Sword for the advance copy! As always all thoughts shared here are my own.

'The Black Death in England: Journal of the Plague Years' by Kathryn Warner is less of a usual book and more of a reference. The book starts by setting the scene before the first round of the Plague raged across Europe. Who were the ruling figures, what were they doing and who were their families., Then, chapter by chapter, we are exposed to names, ages and family trees of many of the individuals and families that met their demise.

In the introduction of the book itself, the goal is pretty clear:
"Journal of the Plague Years aims to give names to some of the people of England who died in the Black Death and those who lived through it, and to recreate a little of their lives wherever possible."

And this is exactly what the book succeeds in doing. I am honestly in awe at how much the author was able to gather about all those people. Who was married to whom? Who were their children? What happened to their loved ones after their passing? What about their wills? I honestly didn't expect all of these details.

While the information is presented in a factual manner, something about just giving names to all those people and realizing that once upon a time, they were real persons with dreams, hopes and full lives is heart-wrenching. The accounts shared are truly horrifying in their ... simplicity. Entire families vanished. Children lost all of their parents, siblings and relatives within days. Young daughters were wed off by the next surviving guardians to 'protect them' as others greed after their inheritance.

This is not a book you read for entertainment, nor is it a book to read casually. This is an ideal reference for anyone exploring the medieval times and the plagues. And it does so brilliantly.

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