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  • Home
  • About
    • Our Mission
    • Resources for Connection
    • News
  • Shop
  • Events
    • Events Calendar
    • Coffee & Connections
    • Loneliness Awareness Week 2026
  • Our Café
    • Bookish Afternoon Tea
  • Contact
    • Hire Us
    • Accessibility Information

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Strangers and Intimates

£10.99

A brilliantly original history of privacy with a simple and urgent argument: private life is a precious and sustaining resource that must be defended.

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ISBN: 9781529034189 Category: British History Tags: Ethical & social aspects of IT, History of ideas, Social & cultural history, Sociology
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Description

An Economist Book of the Year
‘An intricate cultural history . . . Thought-provoking’
– The Sunday Times
‘Brilliantly original . . . Endlessly fascinating’ – Alice Loxton, author of Eighteen
‘Lucid and elegant’ – The Daily Telegraph

From ancient times to our digital present, Strangers and Intimates traces the dramatic emergence of private life, and argues that it is now in mortal danger.

In this sweeping history, acclaimed cultural historian Tiffany Jenkins takes readers on an epic journey, from the strict separations of public and private in ancient Athens to the moral rigidity of the Victorian home, and from the feminists of the 1970s – who declared that ‘the personal is political’ – to the boundary-blurring demands of our digital age.

Strangers and Intimates is both a celebration of the private realm and a warning: as social media, surveillance and the expectations of constant openness reshape our lives, Jenkins asks a timely question: can private life survive the demands of the twenty-first century?

Read a sample here

Additional information

Weight 0.314 kg
Dimensions 19.7 × 13.1 × 2.8 cm
Author

Jenkins, Tiffany

Publisher

Picador

Imprint

Picador

Cover

Paperback

Pages

464

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

323.448 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K

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May 30



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At HOBAF we want to create opportunities for people to meet over coffee and good conversation, providing the chance for people to forge new friendships and community. For Loneliness Awareness Week 2026, we’ll be celebrating those little moments of connection that make such a big difference with Coffee & Connections! 🤝

Free to attend with the added bonus of a free hot drink, what's to love? ☕

Find out more at the link in our bio! 🔗

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May 29



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NEXT WEEK 🎉

Ella Willis joins us on Wednesday 3rd June at 6pm to discuss their new book 'LITERALLY: A Joyful Guide to the Ups and Downs of Being Autistic'. Our bookseller Leah will be in conversation with Ella, and this is what she has to say of the book:
'What a breath of fresh air to read an account of neurodiversity that feels more like chatting to a friend than reading a medical webpage. Ella is funny, honest, and creative in their writing, and I can't wait to talk with them!'
Tickets are still available on our website or in-store now 💛💙
@_ellawillis

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May 29



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THANK YOU to everyone who came along to discuss The Vet's Daughter in May. For June, we will be reading The Director by Daniel Kehlmann. We have multiple sessions available to choose from, including our baby-friendly session on Thursday mornings.

Information and tickets available in-store or on our website.

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May 28



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Loneliness Awareness Week (15 – 21 June) is a campaign dedicated to raising awareness of loneliness. It’s all about creating supportive communities by having open, honest conversations, acknowledging that loneliness affects us all at different times of our lives.

In acknoweldgment of this, Our Chatty Café Volunteers will be around to do what they do best – chat! Why not pop in to the shop, enjoy some free pastries, and have a good natter. No need to book, just drop in.☕🥐

🕑Monday & Wednesday 12 – 1pm

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May 27



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Don't forget we are hosting a Lunchtime Lecture with Chris Moss on 5th June, discussing his book 'Lancashire: Exploring the historic county that made the modern world.' 

Chris will be specifically discussing Manchester, it's identity within Lancashire and eventually 'Greater Manchester' in 1974. This is a great talk for those interested in local history, as well as the wider context that makes our industrial city so important to British historians. Tickets available on our website or in-store 🏙️

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May 26



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Our bookseller Leah is recommending Jenny Offill's Dept. of Speculation to customers this week!

'They were in love once. He wrote her songs, she never missed her ex, they got married and had a child and didn’t realise they’d fallen out of love, until one day they had.

Offill captures the despair, the mania, the bargaining and rationalising of whether to stay or leave, and writes it in a stylised prose that doesn’t feel pretentious. It felt like a novel that could be paired alongside Nora Ephron’s ‘Heartburn’, with its soothing path through the grief of an ending.’


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The House of Books and Friends CIC is a community interest company registration number 13909633, the registered office of which is 53 King Street, Manchester, M2 4LQ. Trading Address - 81 King Street, Manchester M2 4AH. what3words ///stars.wished.papers

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