This is an engaging book, which takes a broad look at the background and consequences of the fire, alongside a detailed and compelling account of the events themselves.
Most popular accounts of the Great Fire draw heavily on Samuel Pepys, but Tinniswood goes substantially beyond Pepys to bring a wide range of contemporary sources, including other diarists, popular songs, official records, and later histories. This is both much better history, and vastly more exciting writing.
Tinniswood frequently juxtaposes the hopes and fears of the protagonists with what happened immediately afterwards. In this way, he brings a fine sense of historic irony to his account. For example, just a week before the fire, Christopher Wren and others were arguing in St Paul's Cathedral about how it should be repaired, following previous damage.
He also places it in a cultural context that few of us are really aware of. The importance of the year 1666 had been widely picked by astrologers and thinkers for a number of reasons, none of which make any sense to most modern people, but which had together combined to fill the city with foreboding. Likewise, the fury vented by the citizens on the French, Dutch and other foreigners would be hard to grasp in today's world, without the author's careful development of the importance of the Dutch war before the fire began.
The picture of London before the Great Fire which he gives us is one of a surprisingly late medieval town. The aftermath of the fire marks the beginning of the modern city.
Fascinating reading.