Fascinating ... not only a history of graffiti, but also a history of the 18th century through lost voices of the people who lived through it. -- Paula Byrne * The Times * A wonderful , vibrant account of how ordinary citizens have carved , scratched , and scribbled their messages across the surfaces of our cities for centuries . It's given me a much broader idea of what is probably the most democratic form of writing we have , but which we tend to dismiss as either bad manners or subversive behaviour ... Madeleine Pelling uses it to open up the lives of people whose voices otherwise went unheard . -- Susie Dent * Daily Mail * A secret history like no other ... a fascinating dip into our ancestors' lives -- Alice Loxton, 'Books of the Year' * BBC History Magazine * You've read the Austen and seen the Gainsboroughs, well this is the real Eighteenth Century in the words of those who walked the streets, worked the coal seams and clung to the topsail yards. -- Dan Snow From the ingenious starting point of a humble scratch on glass or daub on brick, Madeleine Pelling crafts a rich and complex portrait of a society in transition -- Jacqueline Riding, author * Hogarth: A Life in Progress * An erudite, dazzling and thought-provoking study of the graffiti of the period - be its creator Romantic poet or Jacobite, King Mob or Caribbean prisoner of war, Pelling teases out lost narratives with humanity and flair -- Flora Fraser, author * Pretty Young Rebel * An extraordinary history of ordinary people. In this original and impressive study of eighteenth-century graffiti, Pelling foregrounds the protestors, prisoners, rebels and romantics who all left their unique mark on the past -- Hannah Grieg, historian and consultant on 'Bridgerton' and 'The Favourite'