Spitalfields
The History of a Nation in a Handful of Streets
- Published: 6 October 2016
- ISBN: 9781448164561
- Imprint: Cornerstone Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 784
Genial, erudite and companionable . . . this heroic and heartfelt book caps a career devoted to [Spitalfields'] heritage.
Spectator
This is an elegy to a place changing beyond recognition . . . Cruickshank is an appealing, sympathetic writer.
The Times
With beguiling erudition, TV historian and local resident Cruickshank tells the story of Spitalfields from Roman times to today . . . This is people’s history at its tastiest.
Sunday Express
Dan Cruickshank bores into the rich history of Spitalfields, the area of east London where he has lived for decades.
Rowan Moore, Best Books of 2016, Observer
Cruickshank’s history laments the City’s encroachment on Spitalfields and the attendant growth there of estate agents, internet companies, fashion outlets and beardy hipster capitalists bent on having their slice of East End exotica.
Best Books About London, Evening Standard
Cruickshank writes perceptively and honestly . . . As well as being a fascinating account of a unique area of London, Spitalfields is a timely warning that helps us to appreciate what the city and country risk losing.
Country Life
A passionate, scholarly energy and involvement with every era of the district's long history come off Spitalfields' pages . . . Absorbing detail.
Times Literary Supplement
A delight to read . . . Teaches one how to use one's eyes more intelligently.
Jean Seaton, Chair of Judges, PEN Hessell-Tiltman History Prize
For history lovers, this is an excellent read . . . Cruickshank's meticulous research is breathtaking.
Historical Novel Society
[Spitalfields'] raffish vitality is derived from the area's long history of embracing immigrants . . . Cruickshank warns that the greatest threat to Spitalfields comes from the ever-encroaching march of tower blocks.
Must Reads, Daily Mail
Particularly interesting is the story of Elder Street viewed through architectural sources, taxes and censuses. It acts as a microcosm showing the changes Britain faced over the centuries.
Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine
Dan Cruickshank has long been a resident of Elder Street in Spitalfields. In this elaborate chronicle of the district’s past, he takes us on a historical tour that runs from the Romans to Tracy Emin . . . A love letter to a distinctive part of London that has always retained its own personality.
History Today
French Protestants in the 17th century, Irish journeymen in the 18th, Russian Jews in the 19th, Bengalis in the 20th and international hipsters in the 21st have settled in Spitalfields, an area either side of London's Commercial Street that must be, square metre for square metre, among the most migrated-to places in the world. It is so dense with stories that Dan Cruickshank's 750-page history of this 'handful of streets', published last year, feels too short.
Janan Ganesh, Financial Times