Vicky Holmes
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Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements

I have lived with lodgers for perhaps more years than I care to acknowledge. Having stumbled across them when I first delved into coroners’ inquests back in 2007 during a study of fatal household accidents, I found those particular lodgers a home in the Journal of Victorian Culture in 2014. Following this publication, my focus veered to the Victorian marital bed: I was not wholly unsurprised to find lodgers slumbering nearby, but I was somewhat disconcerted to find some under its sheets. In 2020, I finally settled down to research a book dedicated solely to lodgers and those with whom they lived. Then the pandemic hit. So while I spent many hours of the lockdowns crafting a range of vehicles from cardboard to entertain a two-year-old stuck at home, Ruth Mather and Jackie Reed trawled through nineteenth-century newspapers in search of lodgers – I am indebted to their assistance during this time. I am also eternally grateful to all those who laboured behind the scenes of various digitisation projects. Without the British Newspaper Archives, Findmypast, and the Integrated Census Microdata (I-CeM) Project, such a project of this scale would not have been possible and certainly not during the disruption of the past few years.

This book would also not have been possible without the support networks formed online amid the pandemic. I would like to thank the early morning writing group of Cathy Mazak’s Momentum programme and the Friday regulars of the Women’s History Network online writing retreat for taking the writing process beyond the solitary endeavour. However, there are insufficient words when it comes to thanking Helen Sword and the members of the Live Writing Studio for their continued support, enthusiasm for the project, and fabulous feedback over the past two years – any prepositional podge the reader might come across is entirely of my own hand.

I would also like to thank Lyndon Moore for his support and guidance during the early stages of the project, as well as Joe Harley for his always helpful feedback on introductions, along with Simon Dyson, Eddy Higgs, and Gillian Williamson (who has also found herself living with landlords and lodgers) for their meticulous reading of the final draft. Many thanks also to the anonymous reader for Manchester University Press for their similarly meticulous reading and support of the book; the list of page/line numbers pertaining to typos was much appreciated. And, finally, I would like to thank my editors at Manchester University Press, Meredith Carroll and Humairaa Dudhwala, for always providing prompt answers to my questions and for helping me over any bumps in the road.

Research for this book has been financially assisted by the Women’s History Network Early Career Fellowship.

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Living with lodgers

Everyday life, household economy, and social relations in working-class Victorian England

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