Shipped from UK, please allow 10 to 21 business days for arrival. Good, 8th Impression. Coloured illustrated endpapers, frontispiece and profuse and wonderful illustrations by the wildly inventive Heath-Robinson, featuring space saving ideas such as a rabbit huch armchair and vertical garage. Good clean tight sound square, no bookplate, gift inscription to verso of endpaper, no further ownership marks of any kind, well held in joints and hinges, gently bowed to upper board. Bright orange coth boards with black embossed illustration, together with original coloured unclipped matt wraparound pictorial dustwrapper with short closed tear to head of lower and torn with portion of loss to head of upper, resultant slight brownig to board beneath. Now housed and protected in removable mylar wrapper. Great fun and a lovely addition to the library of reader and collector alike.
William Heath Robinson (31 May 1872 - 13 September 1944) was an English cartoonist and illustrator best known for drawings of ridiculously complicated machines for achieving simple objectives.
In the U.K., the term "Heath Robinson" entered the language during the 1914–1918 First World War as a description of any unnecessarily complex and implausible contrivance, much as "Rube Goldberg machines" came to be used in the U.S. from the 1930s onwards as a term for similar efforts. "Heath Robinson contraption" is perhaps more often used in relation to temporary fixes using ingenuity and whatever is to hand, often string and tape, or unlikely cannibalisations. Its continuing popularity was undoubtedly linked to Second World War Britain's shortages and the need to "make do and mend".
Howto Live in a Flat is the first of the 'How to...' titles by Heath Robinson and K.R.G. Browne. Recently published as an ebook by RHE Media Limited, this is a very funny look at living in small spaces with wonderful drawings by the master illustrator William Heath Robinson. Heath Robinson was known as the 'King of Gadgets' and is the UK's equivalent of Rube Goldberg. In this book we have ingenious space-saving ideas such as the Dibedroom - a combination of dining room and guest bedroom and the combined bath and desk for the flat-dwelling business man in a hurry! The text by K.R.G. Browne is also very funny and it is clear that Heath Robinson and Browne were an excellent author and illustrator partnership. With all the news articles about tiny flats being sold for huge sums this 1930s gem is as relevant today as it was between the wars.
Written in the 30s but still very relevant for the modern flat-dweller, this book takes a look at what sort of space-saving inventions might help those living in small spaces. From funny (the "parrot chair", a chair with a bird-cage base) to funnier (the "fresh-air parlour" - one's chair, coffee table, and wall decorations are suspended from poles jutting out from the side of the building), and from absurd (the influenza chair, with a built-in kettle for making hot tea without having to get up) to realistic (a spare bedroom created by moving a wall on wheels across the dining room - I recently looked at an apartment that had this feature to make a studio apartment into a 1-bdrm!), Heath Robinson's drawings and K.R.G. Browne's text will make you yearn for a smaller place so you can make use of these amazing inventions!
FYI - I ordered this book online from the Bodleian Library Shop - an amazing resource for generally useless but totally fun items for the bibliophile(s) in your life!
Funny!! A great coffee table book, especially if you live in a flat (as I do). I LOVE Heath Robinson's drawings and K. R. G. Browne's instructional narrative of how to navigate life as a flat-dweller was a perfect pairing.
Wonderful, inventive illustrations, enjoyable use of black and white line, combined with humorous text made for an interesting holiday read. Still relevant from the 30's?? Love that.
Trafiłem na to dziełko w antykwariacie, kosztowało 4zł, więc kupiłem. Już po kilku stronach wiedziałem, że o NIE jest poradnik :D oczywiście od razu zauważyłem zabawne obrazki, ale że się w treść ani troszeczkę nie wczytałem, to myślałem że tylko obrazki są dla śmiechu, podczas gdy tak naprawdę cała książka jest parodią poradnika. I właściwie to nie wiem jak ją ocenić. Szybko się to czyta i jest zabawna, ale jednak mam wrażenie iż autorzy mają rację pisząc pod koniec: "Nie wydaje się, aby czytelnik (...) mógł mieć tyle zabawy z przetrawienia tego dziełka ile my mieliśmy przy jego opracowaniu." Na ogół tego typu książki nie są w moim stylu (są zabawne, ale nic nie wnoszą, poza tym przez zastosowanie umyślnie trudnych słów niezupełnie lekko się to czyta), ale ta była na tyle w porządku że 4 na 5 gwiazdek mogę dać.