In this book, Bill Bryson never met a digression he didn't like to pursue.
The first part of the book is a bit scattered, as it leaps from now to 1851 to neolithic times and back.
- Twenty thousand dead in the graveyard raised it three feet, giving the church next to it a sunken look.
- Home isn't a refuge from history but where it ends up.
- Phallic pendant (causing) the same look of consternation by its finder.
- Crystal Palace was built in merely 5 months.
- Paxton: the prodigy was hired for his strong clear voice by Duke of Devonshire who was hard of hearing; his work inspired Olmsted's Central Park; invested in railways so well he ended up on the board of these railway companies;
- The Great Exhibition idea came from Cole, who also invented Christmas cards to boost the sales of penny postage.
- The many-interested vicar/ rector class: Malthus/author of Tristam Shandy/breeder of Jack Russel/inventor of the power loom
- At the start of sedantrinism, farming set back people's height by 4 inches; hunter-gatherers actually ate better.
- Human population in neolithic time was very low; whole of Europe had less than 20,000 (?).
- the wonder of corn cultivation
- People learned to make striped fabric before thinking of doors and windows.
- V. Gordon Childe
- Furniture was first made to be moved around, (hence mobilia in Italian) and the domed lids over chests are so to let water slide off.
- board being the most simple 'lap table' -> 'room & board'
- Benches (think 'banquet') came before chairs.