Description
Samuel Pepys achieved fame as a naval administrator, a friend and colleague of the powerful and learned, a figure of substance. But for nearly ten years he kept a private diary in which he recorded, with unparalleled openness and sensitivity to the turbulent world around him, exactly what it was like to be a young man in Restoration London. This diary lies at the heart of Claire Tomalin’s biography. Yet the use she makes of it – and of other hitherto unexamined material – is startlingly fresh and original. Within and beyond the narrative of Pepys’s extraordinary career, she explores his inner life – his relations with women, his fears and ambitions, his political shifts, his agonies and his delights.