Jean Uhland
asked
Sabrina Jeffries:
I really don’t have a question but a comment. When doling out currency in your regency time, it is totally out of whack. As a working girl in England in the late fifties I made only thirty two shillings a week. It cost a farthing for a bus ride. That’s a quarter of a penny. Five pounds would have made me rich! A meal in one of your stories cost ten shillings...in today’s currency that would be two thousand ?
Sabrina Jeffries
Dear Jean,
It would help if you could tell me which book it was in. Then I would know which character that was for. Prices vastly depended on the wealth of the character. For example, this period account of dinner for the wealthy stated, "The dessert- generally ordered at Messrs. Grange's, or at Owen's, in Bond Street- if for a dozen people, would cost at least as many pounds." (From Gronow's Reminiscences). So, a pound per person for dessert alone. I found it very hard to research money, especially in the early days of my career when the internet was in its infancy. Every article I read gave different numbers for how the value of a pound was translated into present-day pounds. Sometimes it was 20 times (so 200 shillings or 10 pounds). Sometimes it was 100 times! These are vastly different numbers. In later years, I could look up meal costs in general, but even now it's hard to find good research on that without spending hours in a library. So I do my best using what research I can find, and knowing that the wealthy spent far more money proportionally than the working class. If you find a reliable source for what the character would have paid for a meal in Regency England, please let me know! That's invaluable information.
It would help if you could tell me which book it was in. Then I would know which character that was for. Prices vastly depended on the wealth of the character. For example, this period account of dinner for the wealthy stated, "The dessert- generally ordered at Messrs. Grange's, or at Owen's, in Bond Street- if for a dozen people, would cost at least as many pounds." (From Gronow's Reminiscences). So, a pound per person for dessert alone. I found it very hard to research money, especially in the early days of my career when the internet was in its infancy. Every article I read gave different numbers for how the value of a pound was translated into present-day pounds. Sometimes it was 20 times (so 200 shillings or 10 pounds). Sometimes it was 100 times! These are vastly different numbers. In later years, I could look up meal costs in general, but even now it's hard to find good research on that without spending hours in a library. So I do my best using what research I can find, and knowing that the wealthy spent far more money proportionally than the working class. If you find a reliable source for what the character would have paid for a meal in Regency England, please let me know! That's invaluable information.
More Answered Questions
Bookworm
asked
Sabrina Jeffries:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
Hi Sabrina, thank you so much for the wonderful books you have written I have enjoyed them all. When you write your books do you write them in chapters or do you do that at the end and do you give your characters names as you write them up?
(hide spoiler)]
Iza Soares
asked
Sabrina Jeffries:
Hey Sabrina! I'm just in love with your books! You're amazing and totally saving my life these days. But I have a pretty important question. Is there a order to read the series? I mean, should one read Lord trilogy before or after Royal Brotherhood, for exemple. I'm pretty sure I've got reading it wrong. It's not something actually bad, but I would rather read it in the right one.
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