David Kynaston is een professionele historicus wiens werken diep ingaan op de Britse geschiedenis, met name de naoorlogse periode. Zijn schrijven wordt gekenmerkt door nauwgezet onderzoek en meeslepende verhalen die cruciale momenten en maatschappelijke stemmingen tot leven brengen. Kynaston richt zich op hoe Groot-Brittannië werd gevormd en evolueerde tijdens kritieke perioden, en biedt lezers een boeiende kijk op het recente verleden. Zijn vermogen om grote historische gebeurtenissen te verbinden met menselijke ervaringen maakt hem tot een belangrijk auteur in de historische literatuur.
Family Britain continues David Kynaston's groundbreaking series Tales of a New
Jerusalem, telling as never before the story of Britain from VE Day in 1945 to
the election of Margaret Thatcher in 1979.
David Kynaston's Austerity Britain 1945-51, the first book in his series Tales of a New Jerusalem, was a major Sunday Times bestseller in 2007. Here is the second volume from this landmark book covering 1948-51. Continuing his ground breaking series about post-war Britain, Kynaston presents a breathtaking portrait of our nation through eyewitness accounts, newspapers of the time and previously unpublished diaries. Drawing on the everyday experiences of people from all walks of life, "Smoke in the Valley" covers the length and breadth of the country to tell its story. This is an unsurpassed social history: intensely evocative to those who were there and eye-opening for their children and grandchildren.
Brimming with wisdom and humour, David Kynaston's diaries written over one football season offer up his most personal take on social history to date. David Kynaston was seven and a half years old when he attended his first Aldershot match in the early months of 1959. So began a deep attachment to the game and a lifelong loyalty to an obscure, small-town football club. Though as he sits down to write his diaries almost sixty years on, he reflects that life might have been simpler if his father had never taken him to that first match at the Rec... Shots in the Dark is the diary David Kynaston kept in the football season of 2016/17, detailing the ups and downs of the 'Shots' in the year that saw a divisive referendum in the UK and the impending ascension of Donald Trump. Here Kynaston presents a social history of modern Britain with a difference - all through the prism of the beautiful game. A testament to the ways in which fandom gives solidity and security to our lives, particularly in these bewildering and rapidly changing times, Shots in the Dark gets to the heart of what it means to be a devoted follower of a sports team. This is a diary of the macro and the micro, as questions of loyalty, of identity, of liberalism and of nationalism all rub uncomfortably up against each other during nine charged months
Illusions of Gold, the third volume of David Kynaston's magnificent quartet,
The City of London, sweeps us from 1914 to 1945, through years of fluctuating
fortunes that began with the City at an all-time high, and ended with the
'Square Mile' ravaged by bombs, at its lowest ebb ever. schovat popis
Between 1890 and 1914 the City of London was all dominant as Britain's
legendary gold standard reigned supreme across the globe. Combining brilliant
scholarship with high entertainment, and drawing on an unparalleled range of
original sources, David Kynaston brings the city triumphant into the
mainstream of British and world history.
This lively and informative book takes the story from the post-war era, when
the City was hemmed in by bombsites and austere Chancellors, through to very
recent developments, such as the Big-Bang deregulation of 1986.
The 'real' Sixties began on 5 October 1962. On that remarkable Friday, the Beatles hit the world with their first single, 'Love Me Do', and the first James Bond film, Dr No, had its world premiere in two icons of the future heralding a social and cultural revolution.On the Cusp, continuing David Kynaston's groundbreaking history of post-war Britain, takes place during the summer and early autumn of 1962, in the charged months leading up to the moment that a country changed. The Rolling Stones' debut at the Marquee Club, the last Gentlemen versus Players match at Lord's, the issue of Britain's relationship with Europe starting to divide the country, Telstar the satellite beaming live TV pictures across the world, 'Telstar' the record a siren call to a techno future – these were months thick with incident, all woven together here with an array of fresh contemporary sources, including diarists both famous and obscure.Britain would never be the same again after these months. Sometimes indignant, sometimes admiring, always empathetic, On the Cusp evokes a world of seaside holidays, of church fetes, of Steptoe and Son – a world still of seemingly settled social and economic certainties, but in fact on the edge of fundamental change.