cover image No Voice from the Hall: Early Memories of a Country House Snooper

No Voice from the Hall: Early Memories of a Country House Snooper

John Harris. John Murray Publishers, $29.95 (242pp) ISBN 978-0-7195-5567-1

From 1946 to 1961, Harris, a Londoner who has written books about architecture, gardens and the decorative arts (The Palladians, 1982) visited more than 200 English country homes that had fallen into disrepair. Ownership of such estates, he writes, first declined as a way of life in 1870, during the agricultural depression, and was further weakened when war death duties were imposed after the Armistice of 1918. On his own since the age of 13, Harris was taken to his first house sale by a bachelor uncle who was his fishing companion. His appetite whetted, Harris supported himself with odd jobs when he was not on the dole and managed to hitchhike across England to view one magnificent architectural ruin after another, many of which had been used to quarter the military during WWII and were now scheduled to be demolished. He recounts many anecdotes of how he wangled his way into both occupied and vacant houses by inventing a relationship with the former owners, pretending to own a painting of the house or simply breaking and entering. Although some of his adventures are amusing and Harris effectively conveys his horror at the wanton destruction of many of England's architectural treasures, his writing, which ranges from matter-of-fact to arid, is not compelling enough to intrigue those who do not already have an interest in old English country houses. 82 b&w photos. (Dec.)