Simon Schama Popular Books

Simon Schama Biography & Facts

Sir Simon Michael Schama ( SHAH-mə; born 13 February 1945) is an English historian and television presenter. He specialises in art history, Dutch history, Jewish history, and French history. He is a Professor of History and Art History at Columbia University. Schama first came to public attention with his history of the French Revolution titled Citizens, published in 1989. He is also known for writing and hosting the 15-part BBC television documentary series A History of Britain (2000—2002), as well as other documentary series such as The American Future: A History (2008) and The Story of the Jews (2013). Schama was knighted in the 2018 Queen's Birthday Honours List. Early life and education Schama was born on 13 February 1945 in Marylebone, London. His mother, Gertie (née Steinberg), was from an Ashkenazi Lithuanian Jewish family (from Kaunas, present-day Lithuania), and his father, Arthur Schama, was of Sephardi Jewish background (from Smyrna, present-day İzmir in Turkey), later moving through Moldova and Romania. In the mid-1940s, the family moved to Southend-on-Sea in Essex before moving back to London. In 1956, Schama won a scholarship to the private Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School in Cricklewood (from 1961 Elstree, Hertfordshire). He then studied history at Christ's College, Cambridge, where he was taught by John H. Plumb. He graduated from the University of Cambridge with a Starred First in 1966. Career From 1966 to 1976, Schama was a fellow and director of studies in history at Christ's College, Cambridge. He then moved to Oxford University, where he was elected a fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford in 1976, specialising in the French Revolution. He also worked at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (EHESS) in Paris. At this time, Schama wrote his first book, Patriots and Liberators, which won the Wolfson History Prize. The book was originally intended as a study of the French Revolution, but as published in 1977, it focused on the effect of the Patriottentijd revolution of the 1780s in the Netherlands, and its aftermath. His second book, Two Rothschilds and the Land of Israel (1978), is a study of the Zionist aims of Edmond and James Rothschild. In the United States In 1980, Schama took up a chair at Harvard University as Mellon Professor of History. His next book, The Embarrassment of Riches (1987), again focused on Dutch history. Schama interpreted the ambivalences that informed the Dutch Golden Age of the 17th century, held in balance between the conflicting imperatives, to live richly and with power, or to live a godly life. The iconographic evidence that Schama draws upon, in 317 illustrations, of emblems and propaganda that defined Dutch character, prefigured his expansion in the 1990s as a commentator on art and visual culture. Citizens (1989), written at speed to a publisher's commission, saw the publication of his long-awaited study of the French Revolution, and won the 1990 NCR Book Award. Its view that the violence of the Terror was inherent from the start of the Revolution, however, has received serious negative criticism. Schama appeared as an on-screen expert in Michael Wood's 1989 PBS series Art of the Western World ("Realms of Light: The Baroque") as a presenting art historian, commenting on paintings by Diego Velázquez, Rembrandt, and Johannes Vermeer. In 1991, he published Dead Certainties (Unwarranted Speculations), a relatively slender work of unusual structure and point-of-view in that it looked at two widely reported deaths a hundred years apart, that of British Army General James Wolfe in 1759 – and the famous 1770 painting depicting the event by Benjamin West – and that of George Parkman, murdered uncle of the better known 19th-century American historian Francis Parkman. Schama mooted some possible (invented) connections between the two cases, exploring the historian's inability "ever to reconstruct a dead world in its completeness however thorough or revealing the documentation", and speculatively bridging "the teasing gap separating a lived event and its subsequent narration." Not all readers absorbed the nuance of the title: it received a very mixed critical and academic reception. Traditional historians in particular denounced Schama's integration of fact and conjecture to produce a seamless narrative, but later assessments took a more relaxed view of the experiment. It was an approach soon taken up by such historical writers as Peter Ackroyd, David Taylor, and Richard Holmes. Schama's next book, Landscape and Memory (1995), focused on the relationship between physical environment and folk memory, separating the components of landscape as wood, water and rock, enmeshed in the cultural consciousness of collective "memory" embodied in myths, which Schama finds to be expressed outwardly in ceremony and text. More personal and idiosyncratic than Dead Certainties, this book was more traditionally structured and better-defined in its approach. Despite mixed reviews, the book was a commercial success and won numerous prizes. Plaudits came from the art world rather than from traditional academia. Schama became art critic for The New Yorker in 1995. He held the position for three years, dovetailing his regular column with professorial duties at Columbia University; a selection of his essays on art for the magazine, chosen by Schama himself, was published in 2005 under the title Hang Ups. During this time, Schama also produced a lavishly illustrated Rembrandt's Eyes, another critical and commercial success. Despite the book's title, it contrasts the biographies of Rembrandt van Rijn and Peter Paul Rubens. BBC Schama returned to the UK in 2000, having been commissioned by the BBC to produce a series of television documentary programmes on British history as part of their Millennium celebrations, under the title A History of Britain. Schama wrote and presented the episodes himself, in a friendly and often jocular style with his highly characteristic delivery, and was rewarded with excellent reviews and unexpectedly high ratings. There has been, however, some irritation and criticism expressed by a group of historians about Schama's condensed recounting of the British Isles' history on this occasion, particularly by those specialising in the pre-Anglo-Saxon history of Insular Celtic civilisation. Three series were made, totalling 15 episodes, covering the complete span of British history up until 1965; it went on to become one of the BBC's best-selling documentary series on DVD. Schama also wrote a trilogy of tie-in books for the show, which took the story up to the year 2000; there is some debate as to whether the books are the tie-in product for the TV series, or the other way around. The series also had some popularity in the United States when it was first shown on the History Channel. In 2001, Schama received a CBE. In 2003, he signed a new contract with the BBC and HarperCollins to produce three new.... Discover the Simon Schama popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Simon Schama books.

Best Seller Simon Schama Books of 2024

  • Doves Of Venus synopsis, comments

    Doves Of Venus

    Olivia Manning

    Pretty, brave and eighteen, Ellie has come to London in search of adventure. She soon finds it in Quintin Bellot, the handsome but tired dilettante who finds her a job in fashionab...

  • MORI Building synopsis, comments

    MORI Building

    Minoru Mori

    From building office blocks in the charred ruins of postwar Tokyo to creating Japan's largest ever urban development, Mori Building Co. has revolutionized how cities are made. In ...

  • Crossing Continents synopsis, comments

    Crossing Continents

    Duncan Campbell-Smith

    For almost a hundred years from the 1860s, the City of London's overseas banks financed the global trade that lay at the core of the British Empire. Foremost among them from the be...

  • I Never Knew That About Royal Britain synopsis, comments

    I Never Knew That About Royal Britain

    Christopher Winn

    With the royal wedding around the corner, there no better time than the present to get acquainted with Royal BritainBestselling author Christopher Winn explores Britain's royal pa...

  • Empire synopsis, comments

    Empire

    Niall Ferguson

    Niall Ferguson's acclaimed bestseller on the highs and lows of Britain's empire'A remarkably readable précis of the whole British imperial story triumphs, deceits, decencies, kind...

  • The Making Of The British Army synopsis, comments

    The Making Of The British Army

    Allan Mallinson

    Edgehill, 1642: Surveying the disastrous scene in the aftermath of the first battle of the English Civil War, Oliver Cromwell realized that war could no longer be waged in the old,...

  • Restoration synopsis, comments

    Restoration

    Tim Harris

    The late seventeenth century was a period of extraordinary turbulence and political violence in Britain, the like of which has never been seen since. Beginning with the Restoration...

  • Fasti synopsis, comments

    Fasti

    Ovid

    Written after he had been banished to the Black Sea city of Tomis by Emperor Augustus, the Fasti is Ovid's last major poetic work. Both a calendar of daily rituals and a witty sequ...

  • The Poems synopsis, comments

    The Poems

    Catullus

    One of the most versatile of Roman poets, Catullus wrote verse of an almost unparalleled diversity and stylistic agility, from the brevity of the epigram to the sustained elegance ...

  • The Complete Poems synopsis, comments

    The Complete Poems

    William Blake & Alicia Ostriker

    One of the great English Romantic poets, William Blake (17571827) was an artist, poet, mystic and visionary. His work ranges from the deceptively simple and lyrical Songs of Innoce...

  • The Mad Emperor synopsis, comments

    The Mad Emperor

    Harry Sidebottom

    What happens when you put the Roman Empire in the hands of a teenage boy? Discover the scandalous life and times of Rome's worst emperor. 'Buy the book; it's very entertaining.' Da...

  • Hope and Glory synopsis, comments

    Hope and Glory

    Stuart Maconie

    In Hope and Glory Stuart Maconie goes in search of the days that shaped the Britain we live in today. Taking one event from each decade of the 20th century, he visits the places wh...

  • New Flavours of the Jewish Table synopsis, comments

    New Flavours of the Jewish Table

    Denise Phillips

    Food has always played a crucial role in Jewish culture, with numerous celebratory feast days marking important occasions throughout the year. In her mouthwatering new collection ...

  • The Terror synopsis, comments

    The Terror

    Graeme Fife

    For the audience that made a major bestseller of Simon Schama's Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution comes this exhaustively researched, characterdriven chronicle of revo...

  • Pillars Of Salt synopsis, comments

    Pillars Of Salt

    Joanna Bell

    Alice's world is blown apart when her husband Rob dies suddenly of a heart attack in another woman's bed. Only 40, Rob was an energetic, opinionated, handsome local GP. This wasn'...

  • The Book in the Cathedral synopsis, comments

    The Book in the Cathedral

    Christopher de Hamel

    From the bestselling author of Meetings With Remarkable Manuscripts, a captivating account of the last surviving relic of Thomas Becket The assassination of Thomas Becket in Canter...

  • The Penguin History of the Church synopsis, comments

    The Penguin History of the Church

    Alec Vidler

    The French Revolution dealt a fatal blow to the alliance of Church and State. The Christian church had to adapt to great changes from the social upheavals of the Industrial Revolu...

  • A Local Habitation synopsis, comments

    A Local Habitation

    Richard Hoggart

    Richard Hoggart's book, The Uses of Literary, established his reputation as a uniquely sensitive and observant chronicler of English workingclass life. In this vivid first volume o...

  • Children of the Revolution synopsis, comments

    Children of the Revolution

    Robert Gildea

    Nineteenthcentury France was one of the world's great cultural beacons, renowned for its dazzling literature, philosophy, art, poetry and technology. Yet this was also a tumultuous...

  • The Catholics synopsis, comments

    The Catholics

    Roy Hattersley

    The story of Catholicism in Britain from the Reformation to the present day, from a master of popular history – 'A firstclass storyteller' The TimesThroughout the three hundred yea...

  • Reflections on the Revolution in France synopsis, comments

    Reflections on the Revolution in France

    Edmund Burke & Conor O'Brien

    Burke's seminal work was written during the early months of the French Revolution, and it predicted with uncanny accuracy many of its worst excesses, including the Reign of Terror....

  • The Fatal Shore synopsis, comments

    The Fatal Shore

    Robert Hughes

    NATIONAL BESTSELLER This incredible true history of the colonization of Australia explores how the convict transportation system created the country we know today."One of the grea...

  • Trollope synopsis, comments

    Trollope

    Victoria Glendinning

    Victoria Glendinning provides a woman's view of Anthony Trollope, placing emphasis on family, particularly on his relationship with his mother. But it is Anthony as a husband a...

  • Call Upon the Water synopsis, comments

    Call Upon the Water

    Stella Tillyard

    This “story of passion, possession, and a painful education in love” (Sarah Dunant, author of In the Name of the Family), spanning several decades in 17thcentury Great Britain and ...

  • The Seed and the Sower synopsis, comments

    The Seed and the Sower

    Sir Laurens van der Post

    What follows is the story of two British officers whose spirit the Japanese try to break. Yet out of all the violence and misery strange bonds are forged between prisoners and the...

  • The Domesday Quest synopsis, comments

    The Domesday Quest

    Michael Wood

    In 1086, Domesday Book, perhaps the most remarkable historical document in existence, was compiled. This tremendous story of England and its people was made at the behest of the No...

  • A Coup in Turkey synopsis, comments

    A Coup in Turkey

    Jeremy Seal

    The most dramatic, revealing and littleknown story in Turkey's history which illuminates the nation'Through the spellbinding career of a single, illfated leader, Jeremy Seal illum...

  • One Life synopsis, comments

    One Life

    Barbara Winton

    Sir Nicholas Winton rescued 669 Jewish children from Nazi occupied Czechoslovakia at the brink of World War II. Most never saw their parents again. This is his story.Now a major mo...

  • The Story of England synopsis, comments

    The Story of England

    Michael Wood

    A VILLAGE AND ITS PEOPLE THROUGH THE WHOLE OF ENGLISH HISTORYThe village of Kibworth in Leicestershire lies at the very centre of England. It has a church, some pubs, the Grand Uni...

  • A Dancer in Wartime synopsis, comments

    A Dancer in Wartime

    Gillian Lynne

    London during the Blitz was a time of hardship, heroism and hope.For Gillian Lynne – a budding ballerina – it was also a time of great change as she was evacuated from wartorn Lond...

  • Selected Letters synopsis, comments

    Selected Letters

    Madame Sevigne

    One of the world's greatest correspondents, Madame de Sévigné (162696) paints an extraordinarily vivid picture of France at the time of Louis XIV, in eloquent letters written throu...

  • Having it So Good synopsis, comments

    Having it So Good

    Peter Hennessy

    Winner of the Orwell Prize for Political Writing, Peter Hennessy's Having it So Good: Britain in the Fifties captures Britain in an extraordinary decade, emerging from the shadow o...

  • Gainsborough synopsis, comments

    Gainsborough

    James Hamilton

    Selected as a Book of the Year in The Times, Sunday Times and Observer 'Compulsively readable the pages seem to turn themselves' John Carey, Sunday Times 'Brings one of the very ...