Not bad for a self-published title by a writer definitely tilting left rather than Ray Davies' wobbly right or at least semi-coherent libertarian-reactionary, self-contradictory rock star slumming as working-class defender of strawberry jam, virginity, and now-"problematic" caricatures in suspect accents. At least Hickey understands the subtle nuances in the characters Davies depicts, as well as their flaws.
And he can talk about the music itself technically. Which makes this a mix of a guide for fans, and insider notes for the musos. He's sharp on the analyses within British culture and late Sixties political and social shifts. While critiquing justly the heavy-handed lyrical reductions rampant in lesser tunes as to the evils of the Establishment in a postwar welfare state enabling Davies and his mates a cradle to the grave safety net funded by the kingdom's high taxes (95%!) exacted on profits raked in, seedy promoters and sleazy managers aside, via the Kinks in their Carnaby Street prime creatively before tax-exile arena years, which mercifully lie outside the mid-Seventies termination of the first decade.
Therefore, respect is paid to their Face to Face- through Muswell Hillbillies run, one of the best in the era of rock and pop. The uneven attention given as each track of the reissued versions of their studio (and a few rather subpar live) efforts can give this short read a bumpy feel, but enough of Hickey's humanism endures to provide a thoughtful if, like the source material, scattershot, survey of 1964-74.