One of the top 3 books of 2025 for me. This is the story of how the Britain we know today was formed, told by the men who worked for it for better or for worse.
What Webber has created with this book is a beautiful tribute to British coal mining, and a truly important capsule of our history and heritage from the men who lived it.
Webber went to great lengths to include a huge variety of perspectives. From the Welsh valleys to the Highlands of Scotland, from Nottingham to Kent to Newcastle. Those who worked the pits young, old, or all the way through adulthood to the pit closures.
One of the things I loved the most, was that very few books about British mining actually explore the centuries of community and industry that came before the 1989 strike. Webber does so perfectly, mentioning the strikes only for a chapter or so before moving on.
There are some very balanced perspectives throughout, with those who loved the pits and those who hated it. Those who managed wages above ground and those who mined below ground. Those who were for the strikes, and those who supported the closure of the pits.
Honestly, I devoured this book. I absolutely could not put it down. The audiobook was spectacular and it was truly delightful to hear those stories orally. However, I also had a hard copy to read whenever listening wasn’t an option.
I truly cannot recommend this book enough to anyone who has an interest in oral histories, British culture, sociology, or coal mining.