It’s called London Lore.. ‘the Legends and Traditions of the World’s Most Vibrant City’ and it tells you stories about London’s superstitions, and tales of witches and others who lived in it.. places that they used to visit perhaps, and which is now a tube station, and curious trees that suicides used to go to.
Here’s a little more about it:-
Few places are so steeped in folklore as London, a city with almost as many ancient legends and deep-rooted customs as it has streets and landmarks, and in London Lore leading folklorist Steve Roud brings together an astonishingly rich selection of them: tales of ghosts and witches, stories about fabled events, heroes and villains, and accounts of local superstitions and beliefs. His range extends right across the capital, from Hampstead in the north, where wild beasts were once thought to roam the sewers, to Anerley Wood in the south, haunt of the much feared Norwood Gypsies, and from Hounslow Heath with its notorious highwaymen to Bethnal Green, long associated with Earl Henry de Montfort, better known as the Blind Beggar.But London Lore does more than simply retell these stories and traditions; it also delves through layers of hearsay and speculation to investigate how and why they arose in the first place. In the process, it shows how the familiar story of Dick Whittington and his cat has connections with the ancient Middle East. It explains why lions rather than ravens at the Tower of London were once felt to be inextricably bound up with the city’s fate.It pinpoints precisely where the story of Sweeney Todd, the demon barber of Fleet Street, was first recorded. And it explores the origins of the once widespread custom of handing out ‘farthing bundles’ of ribbons, buttons and beads to poor children in the East End. Some of these stories and beliefs are shown to have their origins in actual historical events; others to have stemmed from contemporary preoccupations and fears. What they all reveal is the powerful hold that London has exerted on the popular imagination over the centuries, as each successive generation has reshaped existing tales and added new ones of its own.
More info
The Hardback is £20 (but Tesco sell it for £13) and the paperback is about £8.99 from Amazon, although it hasn’t come out yet. I think having a copy of the book would make a cycle ride round London even more exciting. I think I will get the paperback, as it is something that looks like it should be in my Permanent Collection in my bookshelf.
Hey, I like the blog you’ve got on cycling in London – are you a massive cyclist?
By: Robert Kodama on September 21, 2008
at 4:29 pm
Thanks. I have a few cycling blogs and they’re getting addictive (you will understand the ‘addictive personality thing’. Once you start one blog, you do another. Hidden London is my ‘touristy’ cycling blog, it has has ‘less angst’ than http://www.velochick.wordpress com and http://www.cyclingin4×4country.wordpress.com. It is the one that I can get ‘potty’ about historical or weird London or find some bars and things.
By: velochick on September 25, 2008
at 6:53 pm
It sounds good to me,I will keep an eye out for it. I like London a lot, I have been meaning to go back on a Visit sometime . I was reading Copenhagenize .com, Mikael Colvile Andersons Blog and he recommended getting the Book( The Third Policeman by Flann O brien) It is set in Ireland up to 1925 about a Quirky Villages Three Policemen on Bicycles with the People Spending their Days on Bicycles and it is very Funny it has a Murder in it as well,full of Old Time Charm.You can get it on Amazon at £5.89 i think it was.The Snippet he gave was very good worth getting the Book.
By: John . Dubln Ireland on November 8, 2008
at 8:54 pm