<p>The streets of Covent Garden tell a fascinating history of London life over the centuries.&nbsp;One of the first examples of town planning the earliest inhabitants were the social elite living in grand houses looking out on to a continental style piazza. Following the money came the street traders whose successors transformed Covent Garden into one of the world's largest fruit and vegetable markets.</p><p>With the birth of the Market came an influx of writers actors and artists whose bohemian lives gave Covent Garden a reputation as an intellectual powerhouse alongside a low life of crime and prostitution.</p><p>Covent Garden &amp; Strand pulsate with as much life and energy today as they did during their 400-year history. Tourists have replaced market traders and characterful pubs have succeeded gin palaces.&nbsp;The coffee houses of the 17th and 18th centuries were bawdier places than the modern equivalent but eating drinking and entertainment remain at the heart of this dynamic quarter.</p><p></p><p>Popular historian Barry Turner brings alive the characters from aristocrats to costermongers who have shaped Covent Garden and its world-famous Market.</p>