The Faber Book of Smoking

The Faber Book of Smoking

by JamesWalton (Editor)

Synopsis

Since the day that Christopher Columbus first observed native Americans 'with firebrands in their hands and herbs to smoke after their custom', tobacco has wound its way into every corner of modern life. In its various forms smoking has soothed and irritated us, inspired and stupefied us, beguiled us on screen and outraged us in train carriages. Robert Burton wrote in The Anatomy of Melancholy that tobacco was divine, 'a sovereign remedy to all diseases'. Nearly four centuries later, the Oxford Medical Companion dryly noted that tobacco is the only legally available consumer product that kills people when it is used entirely as intended. We've come a long way, baby. With contributions from the likes of Sir Walter Raleigh and Kenneth Williams, Samuel Johnson and Helen Fielding, The Faber Book of Smoking tells the fascinating story of one of humankind's most persistent and peculiar habits.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
Edition: Main
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Published: 05 Nov 2001

ISBN 10: 0571207502
ISBN 13: 9780571207503
Book Overview: The Faber Book of Smoking, edited by James Walton, takes on a habit which has soothed and irritated us, inspired and stupefied us, beguiled and outraged us. With contributions from the likes of Sir Walter Raleigh, Kenneth Williams, Samuel Johnson and Helen Fielding.

Media Reviews
'A marvellously addictive, reach-for-the-fags anthology. It veers effortlessly between the howlingly funny and the grimly compelling.' India Knight, Sunday Times; 'On inhalation it's as intoxicating as its subject matter. Neither didactic in argument nor too loose in construction, it offers a wealth of material... Ultimately what sets this collection apart from many others is its passion.' Financial Times
Author Bio
James Walton is the television critic for the Daily Telegraph and has been the writer and presenter of Radio 4's books quiz, The Write Stuff since 1998. (Sadly, his Radio 4 pop quiz All the Way from Memphis didn't last quite as long.) His first book was The Faber Book of Smoking, which was published to great critical acclaim back in the far-off days when you could still smoke in pubs.