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  • von Chris Arnot
    21,00 €

    How has England changed in the 70 years between the coronations of the late queen and the current king? In Coronation Streets, England Then and Now, British citizens of a certain age look back on their childhoods in 1953 when a glittering ritual in distant Westminster offered a brief break from the day-to-day drudgery of the post-war world. Meat was still rationed. Bomb sites were common sights. Televisions were not. Those who could afford to buy them found their front rooms crammed with neighbours peering at nine-inch screens showing a colourful crown and a golden coach in various shades of grey. The parties that followed were often disrupted by rain and staged in streets lined with houses lacking amenities taken for granted in 2023. For all the greyness of the early '50s, however, there are some colourful memories here from all over England. This is the fourteenth book by Chris Arnot, a former national freelance journalist. Small Island by Little Train was published by the AA and shortlisted for the "outstanding travel-themed writing" awards. And Britain's Lost Cricket Festivals was shortlisted for the Cricket Book of the Year awards. It was one of four of the Britain's Lost series that he wrote for Aurum. Britain's Lost Mines was heralded as "a gorgeous tribute to a whole world which has vanished" by Lee Hall, writer of Billy Elliot. And Britain's Cricket Grounds was heralded as "the best sports book of 2011" by Jim Holden in the Sunday Express.

  • - Nine months in the rebirth of a dying school in a viral year
    von Chris Arnot
    42,00 €

  • - The City where a Great Poet Grew Up
    von Chris Arnot
    22,00 €

    Coventry is used to being written off. But it always makes a comeback. Forty years on from being labelled a 'Ghost Town', it is to be the next UK City of Culture. After Hull, as it happens, the place where Philip Larkin was head librarian at the university's Brynmor Jones Library. His love of libraries, of books, of poetry began in the city where he was born, went to school and spent his first 18 years. His childhood was not "unspent", as he claimed in I Remember, I Remember. He remembered it all too well, the good times as well as the bad, and was devastated by the Luftwaffe's prolonged bombardment of one of England's great mediaeval cities shortly after he had left for Oxford. Larkin About in Coventry goes behind the great poet's curmudgeonly facade and truffles out the places where he was content and even "happy" in his youth. It also takes a fresh look at a city that has two thriving universities and a burgeoning arts scene. Not a ghost town but a host town for cultures from around the globe. Chris Arnot has been a national freelance journalist and author since 1991. His last book, Small Island by Little Train, has been republished in paperback by the AA after being shortlisted for the Edward Stanford awards for outstanding travel-writing. He has written six other books, co-authored The Archers' Archives for the BBC and ghost-wrote eminent educationalist David Kershaw's autobiography Thanks Shanks, how Bill Shankly bought me an education, for Takahe Publishing.

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