You are not logged in.

#1 2014-11-03 14:07:54

CaptainMaddox
Member
From: UK
Posts: 329

Book recommendation

Could anyone recommend any novels that are set in immediate post-war London to the fifties?

I've read Absolute Beginners btw.

I've been on a pre ww2 hype with 'London Belongs to Me' and 'Hangover Square' (Excellent read).

Also read 'Lonely Londoners'.

thanks!!

 

#2 2014-11-04 23:36:47

4F Hepcat
THE Cat
Posts: 14333

Re: Book recommendation


Vibe-Rations in Spectra-Sonic-Sound

 

#3 2014-11-05 12:02:26

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: Book recommendation


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#4 2014-11-05 12:11:12

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: Book recommendation

The L-Shaped Room by Lynne Reid Banks from 1960 is set on London, and I think was popular at the time. I tried to read it many years ago and had to give up as it was so badly written, but I recall it has some local colour, albeit probably with little relation to reality.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#5 2014-11-07 10:30:01

formby
Member
From: Wiseacre
Posts: 8359

Re: Book recommendation


"Dressing, like painting, should have a residual stability, plus punctuation and surprise." - Richard Merkin

Souvent me Souvient

 

#6 2015-01-07 23:26:39

Cagatey01
New member
Posts: 1

Re: Book recommendation

I'm surprised no one has responded to this, it hadn't gone unnoticed by me that G&H's has recently rebranded themselves, back towards the old model. A good thing IMCO?
Hopefully. Just have to see if it's branding or substance.

 

#7 2015-01-10 08:12:56

yeti
Member
Posts: 19

Re: Book recommendation

Saturday Night and Sunday Morning by Alan Sillitoe

 

#8 2015-01-10 09:39:37

stanshall
Member
From: Gilligan's Island
Posts: 12991

Re: Book recommendation


"bow wow wow yippie yo yippie yay"

 

#9 2015-01-10 10:08:48

doghouse
Member
Posts: 5147

Re: Book recommendation


Hide thy infants, hide thy Lady, and hide thy husband, alas they art forcing sexual intercourse upon the entire populace. - Wm Shakespeare

 

#10 2015-01-10 11:11:24

formby
Member
From: Wiseacre
Posts: 8359

Re: Book recommendation


"Dressing, like painting, should have a residual stability, plus punctuation and surprise." - Richard Merkin

Souvent me Souvient

 

#11 2015-01-10 12:42:57

formby
Member
From: Wiseacre
Posts: 8359

Re: Book recommendation

^

As an addendum to the above...

Several of the characters in the books are based on real life characters, or composites and actual events, albeit modified slightly. Real life characters appear also.

The central character in The Long Firm, the gangster Harry Starks is a composite of the Krays, even though they do appear in the novel.

Lord Teddy Thursby seems to be based on the MP (Lord)Bob Boothby.

He is introduced to Starks by Tom Driberg, who of course was an actual MP. Interesting character Driberg. The Private Eye journalist Francis Wheen wrote a biography of him a few years back.

60s London was a colourful place, in more ways than one...


"Dressing, like painting, should have a residual stability, plus punctuation and surprise." - Richard Merkin

Souvent me Souvient

 

#12 2015-01-10 16:09:54

stanshall
Member
From: Gilligan's Island
Posts: 12991

Re: Book recommendation

remember reading about Driberg's having been on friendly terms with Jagger and supposedly giving him The Master and Margarita and urging him to run for Parliament ....

re Wolfe's contention that the single great '60s book had not been written ... I think his own great Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby, The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, and The Pump House Gang are all contenders ..... 

I also like the Lenny Bruce and Sammy Davis, Jr. autobiographies .... Ed Sanders book on Charles Manson ..... Edie .....

another one of the great sixties books is The True Adventures of the Rolling Stones by Stanley Booth, originally titled Dance With the Devil ....

re the OP: Peter Cook: A Biography, by Harry Thompson .......


"bow wow wow yippie yo yippie yay"

 

#13 2015-01-11 01:54:08

4F Hepcat
THE Cat
Posts: 14333

Re: Book recommendation


Vibe-Rations in Spectra-Sonic-Sound

 

#14 2015-01-11 15:01:36

formby
Member
From: Wiseacre
Posts: 8359

Re: Book recommendation


"Dressing, like painting, should have a residual stability, plus punctuation and surprise." - Richard Merkin

Souvent me Souvient

 

#15 2015-01-12 07:48:55

An Unseen Scene
Member
From: Nottingham, UK
Posts: 1268

Re: Book recommendation

The Beats Bums & Bohemians book series is focused specifically on post war London and includes the Terry Taylor & The Furnished Room.
Also Scamp by Roland Camberton, London Belongs To Me by Norman Collins, Adrift in Soho by Colin Wilson, although set pre-WWII I recommend Night & The City by Gerald Kersh (very good crime Soho book)

 

Board footer

Powered by PunBB
© Copyright 2002–2008 Rickard Andersson