"A wonderful book. There is no one better than Adrian Tinniswood to explore the dichotomy of the great country houses of Britain in the long prewar period, as he shows us ancestral hangings mixed with new telephone exchanges, coronation robes with marble swimming baths that doubled as ballrooms."--Judith Flanders, author of A Place for Everything
"Tinniswood has done it again. His trademark blend of glamor, scholarship, and superlative storytelling makes this an enthralling read."--Lucy Worsley, author of Agatha Christie
"Scintillating and brilliant, from a master of the subject. The book is like sitting down to dinner with a fascinating companion--it is deeply learned but also erudite, conversational, and interesting. A beautiful portrait of the Victorian and the Edwardian country house, full of analysis and anecdotes."--Gareth Russell, author of The Palace
"An entertaining mélange of scholarship and scandal."--Kirkus
"One of the most enjoyable aspects of this book is the palpable excitement felt by late 19th-century owners about their houses' newfangled features."--Times
"As with Adrian Tinniswood's other books, [The Power and the Glory] is underscored by meticulous social, economic and architectural research [and an] engaging cast of characters... The range and the scope of his book is breathtaking."--Country Life Magazine
"Entertaining."--Literary Review
A Telegraph Best History Book of 2024
"A lively and informative history sprinkled with nuggets of insight."--Wall Street Journal
"A whirling, waltzing panorama through the last carefree age of British nobility. Tinniswood [has] a terrific eye for detail and anecdote, all the better to show the country house in its most extreme age of pomp, profligacy and exuberance."--New Statesman
"[A] smart, understatedly witty book... the consistent strength of this book is Tinniswood's skill at spotlighting characters; for a book highlighting places, these pages are most memorably full of people."--Open Letters Review