Welcome To Lucy Worsley

If_Walls_for_websiteIf Walls Could Talk

 ... is a book and a 4-part BBC TV series, exploring the intimate history of your home.

The hardback published by Faber&Faber is out now, with paperback to follow in January 2012. The US edition, published by Bloomsbury, will come out around the same time.

     'Has a naughty twinkle in her eye ... a pleasure to read'. -      The Telegraph

     'Saucy intimacies and salacious secrets ... I was glued'. -        Country Life  

      'Almost every page contains [a] diverting          nugget. Worsley is like a larky tour guide ... it's all terrific fun.' -Sunday Times

      'A fascinating journey'. - Daily MailIWCT_paperback_cover_just_front

      'A very enjoyable beginner's guide to British domestic      life'. - Kathryn Hughes, Mail on Sunday

       'Fascinating history ... highly accessible'. - The Herald

 I’ve explored what people actually did in bed, in the bath, at the table, and at the stove. This has taken me from sauce-stirring to breast-feeding, teeth-cleaning to masturbation, getting dressed to getting married.

Along my way, I was intrigued to discover that bedrooms in the past were rather crowded, semi-public places, and that only in the nineteenth century did they become reserved purely for sleep and sex.  The bathroom didn’t even exist as a separate room until late into the Victorian age, and it surprised me that people’s attitudes towards personal hygiene, rather than technological innovation, determined the pace of its development.  The living room emerged once people had the leisure time and spare money to spend in and on it, and I’ve learned to think of it as a sort of stage-set where homeowners acted out an idealized version of their lives
for the benefit of guests.  Meanwhile, the story of the kitchenIfWallsCouldTalk_US_jacket-2 is 
also the story of food safety, transport, technology and gender relations.  Once I realized this, I saw my own kitchen in an entirely new light.

‘An extraordinary and brilliantly entertaining book.  Every paragraph reveals a raft of astonishing facts.’ - Kevin McCloud

I’ve uncovered lots of tiny, quirky and seemingly trivial details, but through them I think we can chart great, overarching, revolutionary changes in society.  A person’s home makes an excellent starting point for assessing their time, place and life.  ‘I’ve a great respect for things!’ says Madame Merle in Henry James’s The Portrait of a Lady (1881).  ‘We’re each of us made up of some cluster of appurtenances … one’s house, one’s furniture, one’s garments, the books one reads, the company one keeps - these things are all expressive’.  That’s why, now as then, people lavish so much time, effort and money on their houses.

The series was commissioned by BBC4 and made by Silver River, and the book is published by Faber & Faber. The photos below show just some of the fun we had…

IWCT_2

Mrs Stern, the cook at Shugborough Hall, shows me how to make a Victorian jelly.

 

 

 

 

IWCT_3

Making wallpaper using William Morris's original blocks at the Sandersons factory in Loughborough. It's not as easy as it looks!

 

 

 

 

IWCT_4

We filmed in the freezing winter of 2009-10.  It was four degrees indoors the day we went to Hardwick Hall!

 

 

 

 

IWCT_5

This was a darn sight more comfortable (apart from the stays I had to wear with that dress) - a lovely Georgian tea party with Amanda and Jane in Spitalfields.


 

 

 

IWCT_6Here Emma Hindley (our producer) and Hugo MacGregor (our director) are explaining the rules of 'bundling' to these brave young people.  In rural areas courting couples might share a bed for a night to see how they got on.  The board down the middle prevented any hanky-panky.



IWCT_7

Here I'm heading down to the sea for a Georgian cold-water sea-dip.  It was claimed (for men) to cure 'a general disorder of the whole Codpiece Economy'.

 

 

 

 

IWCT_8

Here Simon, Adam, Eleanor, Sally and I are trying out the steam baths at Ironmonger Row - in order to talk about the medieval stews of Southwark and surprising fact that medieval people liked a sauna.

 


 

IWCT_9

A beautiful day at Kedleston.  That pavilion is brilliant: you can fish from the upper room, or take a dip in the plunge-pool housed in its lower storey.

 

 

 

 

IWCT_10

Usually I was the one in the bath, but here for once the tables were turned. Hugo, Brendan, Emma and Adam are listening to me talking about the toilet.

 

 

 

 

IWCT

Alison Sim, an expert on Tudor housewifery, takes me bed-bug hunting.  I don't look very happy because I was just about to spend the night in that bed.

 

 

 

 

IWCT_11

When all the filming and editing was done, I was quite shocked to find that it finally began to look like a Proper Television Programme ... the sort of thing I might actually watch and enjoy.

In that picture on the screen I'm toasting you with a tankard of ale while eating Georgian roast mutton.  Cheers.

 

 

 

 
 

© 2011 Lucy Worsley

Designed By All Web Services
Web Design Company