With temperatures soaring to 35ºC, severe water shortages and a sunburned population queuing at the standpipes, the summer of 1976 was always remembered as Britain's hottest.
But the wave that hit the UK that year was also cultural and political, with upheaval on the streets, in parliament, on the cricket pitch and on the radios and TV sets of a nation at a crossroads.
Before this blistering summer, Britain seemed stuck in the post-war era, a country where people were all in it together - as long as you were white, male and straight. In July, Tom Robinson writes a song called Glad to be Gay, and by August bank holiday, Black youth are making the police run for their lives in the almighty riot at the Notting Hill Carnival. But with the Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson suddenly quitting, the pound sinking and the economy tanking, a restless immigrant population and increasing dissatisfaction in the old world order, the weather seemed to boil up the country to the point where the lid blows off.
Weaving a rich tapestry of the news stories of the year, with social commentary and dozens of first-person interviews with those that were there at the time, Williams's reappraisal of the summer of '76 is an evocative, sometimes nostalgic but always an unflinching read. Heatwave takes us back to relive the events of that summer and asks - have we really moved on as much as we would have liked?
A really fascinating book that charts the ‘Summer of 1976’ and its Heatwave,I remember it as being ‘very hot’ ( no big surprise there ) but remember more family and elders referring to it especially if we had a sneeze of heat in the following years,amd tbh even still now…..however what I didn’t know was how that Summer was the catalyst of change for many things in the UK and how life was never quite the same again
Written as monthly big chapters with smaller chapters covering the weather,music,TV,film and sport it also then covers subjects such as racial unrest,gay bashing and how in those months people affected by either or indeed both started to fight back and demand equal rights,also womens rights and strike action for equal pay
We have mini chapters on Joan Armatrading,Tom Robinson,The ‘Confessions’ movies,The Notting Hill Carnival…..to name but a few and all with snippets of interviews with the people connected to these people and events which were interesting and relevant
I really enjoyed The World Events section and how different it was then to find out what was happening in the world vs todays instant access
This book is so much more than the heat,(although the author describes it with clarity and you can feel and smell the heat and the Country as he perfectly takes you back to those few months), it is about an evolving time and place and how through that heatwave the UK made decisions that would affect us still now
Truly mesmerising and without doubt an eye opener of a book..….
The topics that I am interested in were really interesting, such as how the reaction to one progressive school in the press led to the reforms that have ruined education imo. Also weather obvs, politics, some of the music. Went in to great detail about certain topics, like sport, just skipped.
In this book, the author takes a look at the months of May through to August in 1976. In each chapter, Williams looks at the news, the weather, and sports as well as what was on at the cinema, the music of the time. Williams writes about three or four events that happened in each of the four months, such as the strike at the Trico factory in May, the Southall Youth Movement in June, the England v West Indies test series in July, and the invention of punk rock in August.
Heatwave is a fascinating, insightful look at the Summer of 1976 and the stiffling heatwave of the summer that year.
Having been born in 1984, it wasn't something I experienced, but this book appealed to me as it's such a niche read, on as very specific topic, and I enjoy reading these types of books, and I certainly wasn't disappointed.
The chapters cover topics such as the weather, sport, t.v and film, but also highlight racial issues, equality, strike action and general civil unrest and current affairs.
Quite the eye opener, it also covers politics, world events and includes numerous first person interviews from people who were there during that time.
Informative and incredibly well researched, it's such a great window into life in the 70's.
The summer of' '76 was the year I turned five! I may not have been old enough to remember everything in the book as it happened, but those that I did soon had the memories flooding back.
Williams takes us through the months of May to August. The year where reservoirs dried out, temperatures hit an all time high, hosepipe bans became a thing and shared baths were a suggestion...eeew!
It's not all about the weather though, it took me on a wonderful journey down memory lane.
Whether it be politics, news, music, TV and film or books, there's so much that will delight and fascinate!
“Heatwave” is a compelling account of Britain’s age of aggro; it’s long summer of riots and resistance in 1976. This was a deeply strange time for the U.K. where, as the country appeared to fragment and polarise, street violence seemed to be an everyday recreational pursuit. And it was also – as John L. Williams recounts – a summer that was the embodiment of the seedy seventies, where the supposed sexual liberation of the 1960s had warped into the leering visages of Page 3 and “Confessions of a Window Cleaner”.
But “Heatwave” also tells how it wasn’t a completely despairing time for Britain. The summer of 1976 saw people previously scorned by much of British society (gays, women workers, Indians and Black Britons) rise up – even if only temporarily – and demonstrate they were no longer to put up with the shit they’d habitually been served. The most successful passages of “Heatwave” are those that deal with previously overlooked episodes from British social and political history, such as the fascinating Trico strike for equal pay for Women, or the Southall Youth Movement that emerged to combat racist street violence. Less effective are the chapters that look at the nascent Punk Rock scene, given how thoroughly excavated that ground has been by similar social histories. And Williams’ scope is a little too London-centric (Scotland and Wales barely merit a mention in “Heatwave”, and The Troubles in Northern Ireland are dealt within the course of three pages), perhaps a problem when so much of your source material is gathered from the national newspapers and weekly music magazines of the time. Nevertheless, this is an arresting snapshot of a time – not completely unlike our own – when society seemed to resemble a powder keg about to explode.
Although I was still in primary school, I remember the Summer of 1976 well. My father had died the previous summer and so things had changed quite drastically in my small world. However, as always, life moves on and the following year Britain had a heatwave like none since. This book takes the reader from May to August, looking at monthly themes, such as the weather (obviously!), news headlines, sport, films, music and other cultural touchstones and also has sections that are relevant perhaps only to that particular month.
During this period there was, of course, no internet or mobile phones and a handful of television channels. As such, many of my generation have very similar cultural memories about music or television. Williams enlarges on television programmes, such as 'Rock Follies,' which I recall (and like the author owned the soundtrack album), or the rise of punk rock. It was the time of The Troubles, of the Yorkshire Ripper, of strikes, riots and unrest. There were also plagues of ladybirds (luckily one of the less frightening of insects as they were everywhere and, in this book, I finally found out why), water rationing and generally, endless sun. It was a restless, tense time, but also a very exciting one. I enjoying revisiting that period and found this a very interesting journey back to the mid-Seventies.
This book is such an important one to read, especially with everything going on at the moment and political parties only seeming to fuel the first sometimes. This book brings back the thoughts of how short a time span ago it was that certain deplorable things still happened and, sadly, how little we have actually changed. I really liked the unique layout, with the chapters and then the smaller sections within, almost like a chapter in a chapter. I also liked that each of these sections took on some of the biggest parts of that month, really hitting them right in the face with what we were seeing happen and what was not changing like it should be. I really liked how open the author was with how they looked at what was going on called things out.
I think that if you’re not British then you need to be an an anglophile to enjoy this book fully. Lucky for me I’ve been slightly obsessed with Great Britain since reading my first Enid Blyton book at age nine. A lot of obscure British popular culture in this and I loved every bit of it. Even the chapter about cricket though I can’t make heads or tails of that particular sport.
A fantastic book detailing a significant period of social history. I was a similar age to the author at the time and have enjoyed a nostalgic journey back in time whilst learning more about the key events of the period. I consumed this in 4 days and only wish it could have been twice as long. Highly recommended.
I was pretty much the same age as John in the summer of 1976. Some of the history he covers I remember some I don’t. Either way it’s an excellent tale which resonates nearly 50 years later. The rise of political populism, the demonising of minorities, ingrained racism, intolerance of other cultures, it’s all here. Sound familiar?
A catalogue of some of the memorable events, and the music, of that year. It triggered off lots of reminiscences for me. I still have a vivid memory of running outside to stand in the rain when it finally came.
A book to skim rather than read in depth. I liked the structure, month by month with short sections about the weather, the front pages, inside pages and so on. A lot was about things I wasn't interested in then and still am not (fashion, sport, punk rock). Some was interesting social history (strikes, casual violence, attitudes to women, gays and minorities, "progressive" education) and some was about things I actually remember (the weather itself, the Montreal Olympics, the Entebbe raid). The author makes a good case that the summer of 76 was a social and cultural turning point - in lots of positive ways.