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The confession of a reluctant water drinker. This is a love letter to wine and everything that came with it.
Summary
"A drinker's crown of sorrow is remembering wetter days"
The love of drinking was well-developed in the nineteenth-century Englishman. With chapters on port, claret, sherry, champagne, Burgundy, Madeira, wine cellars, glasses and butlers, Through a Glass Lightly is a love letter to wine and everything that came with it. But the passionate tale has a sorry ending: in the final two chapters, the author develops gout and has to become a teetotaller in order to be able to take out life insurance.
Through a Glass Lightly is part of 'Found on the Shelves', published with The London Library. The books in this series have been chosen to give a fascinating insight into the treasures that can be found while browsing in The London Library. Now celebrating its 175th anniversary, with over 17 miles of shelving and more than a million books, The London Library has become an unrivalled archive of the modes, manners and thoughts of each generation which has helped to form it.
Foreword
A love letter to wine, celebrating the 175th anniversary of The London Library
Additional text
"Thomas Tylston Greg pays homage to a drink many of us love in Through a Glass Lightly: Confession of a Reluctant Water Drinker. Don’t let the title fool you; it is wine he celebrates, not H20. The author looks at the beloved beverage from the nostalgic perspective of someone who has had to give it up. As such, it’ll make you appreciate wine all the more." — Bustle
"A perfect stocking filler for any of your friends who have an interest in wine…" — Standpoint
"You should buy this book for the one-liners alone." — The Times (UK)
"Written in the kind of clubbable style which will be familiar to anyone the reviews and essays of WE Henley or Max Beerbohm." - Spectator
"An inspired idea...an innovative series." - Spectator (of the London Library series)
"A heavenly little series." - Observer's Best Holiday Reads 2016