- Published: 1 December 2004
- ISBN: 9781405695336
- Imprint: BBC DL
- Format: Audio Download
- Length: 7 hr 56 min
- Narrator: Timothy West
Unruly
A History of England's Kings and Queens
- Published: 1 December 2004
- ISBN: 9781405695336
- Imprint: BBC DL
- Format: Audio Download
- Length: 7 hr 56 min
- Narrator: Timothy West
Who knew a history of England's rulers could be this hilarious? A brilliantly entertaining romp through monarchs.
i
A historical tour of English rulers in a book that is like no history lesson you've had to endure before. A semi-serious book full of weird and wonderful spectacle, scandal, and brutality.
Luxury London
I don’t think anyone other than David Mitchell could have written this book. It’s clever, funny and makes you think quite differently about history we thought we knew
DAN SNOW, HISTORIAN AND BROADCASTER
By turns fascinating and funny - there is a jewel of an insight or a refreshing blast of clarifying wit on every page. David brings a delightfully contrary and hilariously cantankerous eye to the history of the English Monarchy. Informative, illuminating and very very funny
JESSE ARMSTRONG, CREATOR OF SUCCESSION AND PEEP SHOW
I can’t recommend this book enough. Very funny and interesting, it is above all a proper work of history
Charlie Higson
Mitchell clearly knows his history, with a book that owes as much to Monty Python as it does to Simon Schama
Andrew Marr
An enjoyable, rollicking read, definitely not a conventional history book
Sunday Times
Clever, amusing, gloriously bizarre and razor sharp. Mitchell - a funny man and a skilled historian - tells stories that are interesting and fun. His rants alone are worth the price of the book. And amid all the jokes and delightful nonsense, Mitchell sneaks in a serious message about English identity. Here is Horrible Histories for grownups - stripped of their finery, devoid of reverence, UNRULY's monarchs emerge as mortals with ordinary flaws. I learnt a lot and laughed a lot, and people who have never before picked up a history book will read and enjoy this one. That's an accomplishment
Gerard DeGroot, The Times
A Peep Show history of England
Sunday Times
A riotously funny romp through one thousand or so years of English history. I cannot remember the last time I laughed as much as I did listening to Unruly. Mitchell’s take on history is unremittingly funny as well as insightful. There are so many exquisite turns of phrase. I had to stop listening whilst cooking for fear I’d drop red-hot pans, I was shaking with laughter so much.
Entertainment Focus
A Punch-and-Judy show of awful people doing terrible things to one another. There is refreshing candour in how it calls out the bastards, bullies and brats who have donned England’s highest-carat hats. Above all, it’s a funny read, playful and well-meaning . . . told in a fizzing and indignant style, rammed with entertaining tangents. A sleek rod of Mitchell, fired from a rail gun, passing straight through the reader’s skull
Daily Telegraph
Unruly is part Horrible Histories part jolly romp guided by Alan Bennett. Perhaps this is how history should be done: not by patient scholars, but by free-swearing actor-comedians cramming more ideas and jokes into their pages than many professionals have committed to print in their careers.
Guardian
He brings his typically wry style to an exploration of England's monarchy
History Revealed
Provocative, energeticlly comical, unortodox. Stuffed full of comical scenes and anecdotes, which only an author with a fine sense of the absurd could give us.
Mail on Sunday
Full of jokes and canny insights, 100 per cent sparkier and more revernt than your school textbooks
I
I relished a crash course in English history with comedian David Mitchell’s ambitious Unruly.
Daily Express, Books of the Year
Chatty, irreverent and liberally sprinkled with gags and opinions. Horrible Histories with added swearing.
Guardian
[A] rollicking (and bracingly sweary) account . . . Amid the jokes, Mitchell offers a thoughtful argument about the relationship between the monarchy and our sense of national identity
Daily Mail