The Social History of Smoking by George Latimer Apperson
Forget everything you think you know about the history of smoking. George Latimer Apperson's book isn't a medical text or a moral lecture. It's a journey through five centuries of social life, with tobacco as our unpredictable guide. Published over a century ago, it feels fresh because it's not interested in judging the habit, but in understanding how people lived with it.
The Story
There's no single plot, but there is a clear arc. Apperson starts when tobacco was a strange New World novelty, a medicine and a curiosity for Elizabethan England. He shows us how it was first attacked—King James I wrote a furious pamphlet against it—and then embraced. The book moves through the 1600s and 1700s, when smoking became central to male social life in taverns and clubs. Then comes the real shift: the 1800s. The cigar becomes a symbol of the gentleman, and later, the cigarette arrives, changing everything again. Apperson tracks its path into the hands (sometimes secretly) of women and into every corner of society, right up to the edge of the modern anti-tobacco movements of his own time.
Why You Should Read It
What makes this book special is the detail. It's full of surprising snippets: did you know Sir Walter Raleigh's servant threw a bucket of water on him, thinking he was on fire when he first smoked? Or that in the 1600s, Oxford students could be fined for missing a smoking lecture? Apperson uses poems, laws, diaries, and jokes to build his picture. You see how smoking rituals defined friendships, business deals, and even social class. Reading it, you realize how deeply a simple habit can be woven into the fabric of daily life, art, and politics. It gives you a new lens to look at old paintings, literature, and even our own world.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect book for history lovers who enjoy the offbeat paths, not just the main roads of kings and wars. It's for anyone curious about why social customs change. The writing is clear and packed with anecdotes, so it never feels dry. Just be aware it was written in 1914, so it ends before the full health debates of our era. But that almost adds to its charm—it captures the world when smoking's social story was still being written. Pick it up for a fascinating, and often funny, tour of the past, one puff at a time.
Donald Young
8 months agoFinally a version with clear text and no errors.
Daniel Robinson
1 year agoI stumbled upon this title and the character development leaves a lasting impact. Truly inspiring.
Donna Lee
1 year agoWithout a doubt, the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. A valuable addition to my collection.
David Torres
1 year agoGood quality content.
John Ramirez
1 year agoI came across this while browsing and it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. I couldn't put it down.