Innovation brings Peter Ackroyd's History of England to a triumphant
close. Ackroyd takes readers from the end of the Boer War and the
accession of Edward VII to the end of the twentieth century, when his
great-granddaughter Elizabeth II had been on the throne for almost five
decades.
It was a century of enormous change, encompassing two world wars, four
monarchs (Edward VII, George V, George VI and the Queen), the decline of
the aristocracy and the rise of the Labour Party, women's suffrage, the
birth of the NHS, the march of suburbia and the clearance of the slums.
It was a period that saw the work of the Bloomsbury Group and T.S.
Eliot, of Kingsley Amis and Philip Larkin, from the end of the post-war
slump to the technicolor explosion of the 1960s, to free love and punk
rock, and from Thatcher to Blair.
A vividly readable, richly peopled tour de force, Innovation is Peter
Ackroyd writing at the height of his powers.