Thank you for the days...
Stuart Maconie, inventor of the coinage 'Britpop' and the urban myth that Bob Holness played saxophone on Gerry Rafferty’s Baker St, investigates the 20th Century days that, in his opinion, made modern Britain. They are, in chronological order: the death of Queen Victoria, the (first day of the) Battle of the Somme, the General Strike, the launch of the BBC, the Windrush docking, the ascent of Everest, the World Cup that the Engerland men’s team won, the Sex Pistols play Manchester, Live Aid and finally, Labour’s 1997 win that ended 18 years of destructive Tory rule.
None of these is a particularly controversial choice, at least not for Maconie’s intended readership, but he writes around his subjects, so the chapter on QV1’s death is also about the Suffragettes, he writes a good three and a half pages on Accrington “Who are they?” Stanley in the chapter on WW1, he talks a lot about fell walking and mountaineering in the 1950s section and the Sex Pistols clash (quite literally) with the Queen's Jubilee in 1977.
He also visits the locations (not Everest) where these events took places, which seems unnecessary, but it’s all tax-deductible, and completes a trilogy with his other travelogue books about the north and the middle of England. Although I could probably have done without everything Mr Maconie ate for lunch on his travels - without all the deciding between a tea cake and a crumpet, we could have saved ourselves about 100 pages.