Hester Grant studied modern history at Christ Church, Oxford, where she was awarded the J. L. Field Exhibition and the Keith Feiling History Prize. She subsequently trained and practised as a barrister. Hester gave up her legal career to bring up her three children, and to pursue her great loves of writing and eighteenth-century British history. Her fascination with the Sharps began when she saw their portrait at the 2012 Johan Zoffany exhibition at the Royal Academy.
[A] luminous and detailed account of the lives of this unique
family and the turbulent times they navigated... striking and
poignant
*Sunday Times*
Group biography at its best: a family of vivid and inspiring
personalities, making waves in diverse, interconnected worlds. The
Sharps leap off the page and into your heart. Georgian England will
never seem quite the same again
*Amanda Foreman*
What a family, and what an age: the seven Sharp siblings not only
helped refashion the 18th-century world around them...but the
causes that engaged them then are hardly less resonant some 250
years later... an account of lives fulfilled and well-lived,
narrated with exceptional insight, warmth and humour. Grant
conjures the texture and bustle of daily lives in vivid,
imaginative vignettes that track the siblings at work and play, and
one closes the book with a sharp pang of regret, along with real
affection and admiration for its protagonists.
*Spectator*
Grant skilfully weaves her vast knowledge of 18th-century English
history and the complex story of a large family into a fluent
narrative... It's the intertwining in their lives of the radical
and the typical, the ordinary and the extraordinary which Grant's
book so beautifully reveals
*Daily Telegraph*
The Good Sharps offers readers a unique and poignant perspective
from which to consider the Georgina period
*Who Do You Think You Are?*
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