
The Way It Was
Description
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How did we get from there to here in a single reign? To cancel culture, anti-vaxxers and Twitter feeds? Matthew Engel tells the story - starting with the years from Churchill to Thatcher - with his own light touch and a wealth of fascinating, forgotten, often funny detail.
Reviews / Votes
Delivers equally sharp observations of Teddy Boys, hanged murderers, the British Empire, swinging London, National Service and Mrs Thatcher's ascent to power... A powerful illumination of a lost world that is nevertheless part of living memory. -- Simon Heffer * 'Books of the year', Daily Telegraph * Masterly... Consistently entertaining, frequently surprising and sometimes provocative. -- Peter Wilby * 'Books of the Year', New Statesman * A joyous new book on post-war Britain. * Daily Mail * Entertainingly written... An immediately credible, and at times highly personal, picture... Engel brings his own views to bear, usually with wit, and at times with pleasing eccentricity. * Spectator * A pleasingly anecdote filled new social history of the second Elizabethan era... Like the best assortment boxes, it encourages regular dipping, each chapter short and tasty enough to make you say "oh, just one more". -- Patrick Kidd * The Times * Has at least one priceless detail per page. -- Philip Norman * Observer * Full of richly revealing stories and quotidian detail, laced with incisive but humane judgements, and never missing the big picture of a country where the pace of social change was rapidly quickening - Matthew Engel has given us a tour de force about post-war Britain which delights and illuminates on every page. -- David Kynaston A pure delight. There is a gem on every page. -- Peter Hennessy I really enjoyed this romp through the headlines, partly because Matthew Engel is such an amusing writer and partly because all sixty-one of his chapters come up like three-minute songs on the jukebox - soon over and always time for just one more... Engel thinks like a journalist but writes like a raconteur. * Literary Review * The best feature writer of his generation, Engel really scores in his attention to the minutiae of lived experience... And he has a journalist's eye for the killer detail. * The Tablet * Rich in anecdote and telling detail it's a masterly evocation of a time of great social change. * Choice Magazine *More details
Other editions
Additional editions


Person
Content
- Intro
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Author's note
- Prologue
- The 1950s
- 1. God save the . . .
- 2. The state of her realm, 1952
- 3. The crowning glory
- 4. What's on tonight?
- 5. Women and children
- 6. The moral tone
- 7. The immoral tone
- 8. Let him have it, Goddard
- 9. Shoulders back!
- 10. Summoned by buzzers
- 11. Years of living dangerously
- 12. The reign of error
- 13. The young ones
- 14. The newcomers
- 15. Reach for the sky
- 16. Of dukes and debs
- 17. So good
- 18. Keep going well
- The 1960s
- 1. Wives and servants
- 2. C'mon, little miss, let's do the twist
- 3. Goodbye to all that
- 4. Read all about it!
- 5. They love us, yeah, yeah, yeah
- 6. Enough rope
- 7. The last from the past
- 8. Mickey Mouse and Rattín
- 9. Up, up and away
- 10. If you can meet with triumph and disaster
- 11. Smashing the crockery
- 12. Ye Blocks, ye Stones
- 13. Closing time
- 14. A woman's work
- 15. Down with skools
- 16. The past blasters
- 17. Now we are forty
- 18. The faint echoes of empire
- 19. The moon, money and Murdoch
- The 1970s
- 1. Is the show really over?
- 2. Listen to reason
- 3. The iceman cometh
- 4. Everybody out
- 5. Down among the dead elms
- 6. And the bands played on
- 7. We're in
- 8. He's out
- 9. It's that man again
- 10. Change and decay
- 11. Anarchy on the King's Road
- 12. Heatwave and humiliation
- 13. Flaps, sir!
- 14. The land of lost content
- 15. Mark the herald angels sing
- 16. The girl that I marry
- 17. The madman of Kampala
- 18. But this is home
- 19. Weirder still and weirder
- 20. The people's pleasures
- 21. Hearth and health
- 22. The eerie quiet, the bitter harvest
- 23. Change and echoes
- 24. The woman's hour
- Acknowledgements
- Plates
- List of illustrations
- Index
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