I like this guide really like - can wonderfully read without one wants to look something up. Add to this a really sad, but it is unadorned image of a woman and the aristocracy of the rights. Man was who, woman was a commodity - or annoying. What was missing - in some cases (eg mourning practices as mourning times) I would have liked more details. In some articles I was missing a little the Factual. Very nice to get introduced to individual articles of the female wardrobe, but I would have quite liked times a list of how many dresses as a cloakroom for actually existed. Only a morning dress, or their more? Just a ball gown, or an entire closet full. So an average example of filling a wardrobe / dressing room would have given me since. What Mrs. monasteries has also completely left out - probably because she is American and one simply avoids certain topics there - personal hygiene. Toothbrushes and toothpastes be mentioned in Heyer's books, but how it looks with the articles of menstrual hygiene? What has been used? No one needed detailed drawings, but a sentence or two on this topic would have been all right with me. Likewise, the phrase what has been used in place of today's toilet paper. When we read such novels today, but you can not really imagine what it means, sometimes just to disappear at an evening party not to the toilet. Also, the legal age of marriage, the different types of marriage licenses and their impact, all I so laboriously seeking me in power, I would have liked gathered in this book. Well, I think that Mrs. monasteries always restores the reference to the novels of Mrs. Heyer. In each chapter they are quoted, which makes for a pleasure sure to read the novels again, on the other hand it can act more plastic, such as a game scene in a documentary for me the essay. Although my book really like - because of omissions will be just only 4 out of 5 stars.