This short book (90+ pages), is an introduction to mudlarking, a long-lived tradition in London and elsewhere along the Thames river. Mudlarks are people who walk along the foreshore of the river at low tide, looking for items of interest in the mud. Mudlarks were historically poor children looking for things they could sell, like rope and metal, to support themselves. Now, mudlarks are people more interested in the history of their finds than in their monetary value. A permit is required to go mudlarking, and you are also required to report your finds to local museums.
The book has a short overview of the history of mudlarking, but is mostly focused on past finds, which are organized by era. The photographs are wonderful and I wish there were more of them and that they were bigger. The text briefly describes each era and then some of the more notable finds from that era, each of which is pictured.
I found the chapter titles oddly confusing. For example, "Vanity and Sex," "Opulence and Witchcraft," and "Death and Decadence," make it seem like the finds are divided by theme, rather than era. The author may have been trying to create interest, but these titles are unhelpful. Were vanity and sex only prevalent in Roman London? Death and decadence only in the 18th century? Just to write those sentences, I had to look up in the book which eras they represent because it's not obvious.
Overall, I enjoyed the book, although, as I say, I wish it was more of a coffee table book, with lots of big glossy pictures, as it's doubtful that many of the readers are going to make it to London to see all the finds in person at museums there. The book is rather an odd duck. It feels like a souvenir catalog or "coming attractions" advertisement for the Thames Museum that he mentions will be opening eventually and will be dedicated to the history of the river and will house mudlark finds. He describes the museum's goals and focus in some detail at the end of the book.
I have yet to find the perfect book for me on mudlarking. This isn't quite it, but I do recommend it, especially for people who have never heard of mudlarking.
I received a ARC from Netgalley in exchange for a fair review.