RANDOM JOTTINGS


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"Victorian Secrets is a small publishing house devoted to making the works of neglected Victorian writers available to the modern reader.

Although over 60,000 novels were published during the nineteenth century, only a very small number have remained in print. In some cases there’s a very good reason for that, but others have been undeservedly forgotten"

This is the introduction on the About page over on the website of this fascinating publishing house – do please check it out on http://www.victoriansecrets.co.uk/about-2/.  As a lover of Victorian literature I was simply delighted to discover all these quirky and interesting books being hunted out and republished.  I found out about it via a contact at OUP who is also on Facebook who has a friend who is the MD and so it goes – fascinating to stumble across places like this and when this happens I rejoice in the internet and its facility to produce such serendipitous discoveries.

I was very kindly sent two books which they have published in the last year.  The first is The Perfect Man by David Waller "The Muscular Life and Times of Eugen Sandow Victorian Strongman" and the cover is adorned with a photograph of this fine figure of a man wearing nothing but a strategically placed fig leaf. Bet that caused many a heart to flutter…    He was incredibly famous body builder and well known on the stages of the Victorian Music Hall and, naturally, took commercial advantage of his  Es fame.  It was possible to purchase a Sandow's spring-grip dumbell, made in different sizes for Gentleman, Ladies and Boys and Girls and could only be purchased from 'Athletic Outfitters' which conjures up the rather wonderful picture of shop assistants vaulting over the counter to serve their customers.

He is even mentioned in Ulysses where Leopold Bloom tried 'the indoor exercises prescribed in Eugen Sandow's Physical Strength and How to obtain it" and it seems that PG Wodehouse was also an adherent, contributing articles to Sandow's Physical Culture magazine while working for the Hong Kong & Shanghai Bank in the City of London.    Mr Sandow seems to have been a superstar and returning to Britain in 1905 after an 18 month absence he received an amazing reception, being greeted by a large crowd while a bank played See the Conquering Hero Comes.

He died very suddenly, probably of an aneurysm, by which time his fame had started to decline.   HIs widow, Blanche organised a funeral very hastily and two days after he died there was a brief service and then was quietly buried.  She never granted interviews or spoke about him and when admirers of Sandow visited his grave they found it neglected and overgrown with weeds.   One wonders why his wife behaved in this way and there are several interesting theories put forward by the author.  

A superb book – quirky, interesting and totally fascinating.  As I love all things Victorian this is definitely staying in my library.

The second book I was lucky enough to read ws Dorothea's Daughter by Barbara Hardy.  It is a new Ddcollection of short stories based on novels by Austen, Charlotte Bronte, Dickens, George Eliot and Thomas Hardy and I fell upon it with shrieks of joy.  Just look at the titles:

  • Twilight in Mansfield Parsonage
  • Mrs Knightley's Invitation
  • Adele Varens
  • Lucy Snowe and Pauline Bretton: the Conversation of Women
  • Edith Dombey and Son
  • Harriet Beadle's Message
  • Lucy Dean
  • Dorothea's Daughter
  • 'Liza-Lu Durbeyfield

I am not identifying any of the novels on which these are based as I  know that all my Random Readers are intelligent and well read and can guess straight away …..

These are all little gems and I am not going to say anything about them at all as I want you to buy and read for yourself.  I will say, however, that Dorothea's Daughter was my favourite.

I note that Victorian Secrets has a biography of Jerome K Jerome coming up – another to go on my Wish List.

Please do check out this marvellous publishers- these are the kind of ventures that should always, always succeed.

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9 responses to “Victorian Secrets”

  1. Susan D Avatar
    Susan D

    Hello Ladies. Does your man look like this?






    I especially like the somersault.

  2. Elaine Avatar

    Kristi – THANKYOU! I knew I had heard of Sandow the Great somewhere and that was it – I watched this film last year and remember these scenes clearly now.

  3. Elaine Avatar

    It is a fascinating little book – not sure that all the stories worked, in my opinion only I hasten to add, but these follow ups to intriguing characters are always interesting

  4. Elaine Avatar

    Oh yes the fig leaf is wonderful – he really has a superb physique

  5. Elaine Avatar

    Col – yes when I first checked this publishers out I ended up in exactly the same place!! And please pretend away and your comments brought back memories of my geography GCE when we had an outline map of the UK and a list of places to mark up. I put Anglesey in East Anglia as I thought it sounded logical…………….

  6. Kristi Jalics Avatar

    Fascinating topics! The 1936 movie The Great Ziegfeld has “Sandow the Great” (played by Nat Pendleton) appearing in several early scenes set in 1893 at the Chicago World’s Fair….Both books sound like ones I would love to read.

  7. Pam Avatar
    Pam

    Dorothea’s Daughter sounds very interesting. I’m wondering whether Hardy attempts to write each short story in the style of the original author? I’ll be looking out for this one.

  8. Susan D Avatar

    Goodness, what riches, immediately after reading SIAB’s contribution this morning (it’s morning in Toronto). I’m having a hard time getting on with my writing day, just checking out all these treasures.
    And Col — ha! I love it! Good thing I wasn’t sipping my coffee at the moment.
    Don’t you love TPM’s fig leaf? I recall some years ago when selected exhibits from the V and A toured the world, I was all astonishment at the sheer size of the marble fig leaf which had been disgned to cover up David’s private parts for a special Victorian Royal Visit (Victorian in all senses of the word).

  9. Col Avatar

    I like the sound of “The Perfect Man” so I will look out for that. I’d echo your thought that this is exactly the type of enterprise that ought to succeed if there’s any justice. I hope so.
    I hope it’s OK if I just pretend that I am one of those well-read and intelligent readers who recognises all the titles from “Dorothea’s Daughter”!!!! At least that way I can hide the gaps in my literary knowledge – a bit like multiple choice tests in my Physics GCSE covered up the fact that I’d no idea what was going on with molecules and the like! (It’s quite sad when your scientific knowledge is reduced to “I haven’t chosen answer ‘C’ for a while – I’ll try that!”)
    And a word of advice for those looking for the Victorian Secrets publishing house through Google – I mis-typed the first word and ended up on a site modelling lingerie! Luckily it didn’t expose the gaps in my literary knowledge or my grasp of physics either!

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