This week I'm reading 'The Empire of Tea' by Alan MacFarlane

This is a nonfiction history looking at the rise of tea in human society and mainly how it shaped and was shaped by the British Empire with a particular focus on the efforts to develop tea production in the Assam region of India.
It's okay so far, a little unfocused at times, and I'm hoping that later on it becomes more critical of imperialism.

#FridayReads
@bookstodon

may I recommend also _The Great Hedge of India_, Moxham, which is also about tea and salt and the hedge and archives and the rise and dissolution of the British Empire?

https://search.worldcat.org/title/59392176

@fskornia @bookstodon

@clew Looks like I'm going to have ILL it. Which is great, ILL is one of the coolest library services that exists.

@fskornia Ages ago when I read it there was a little flutter of people finding relevant stuff in different archives

iirc someone researching cavalry narratives found a reference in a letter by someone who *saw the dead hedge burning in the distance*

Ten minutes out of history, that might be the only surviving reference in English, and it didn't even make it into the book