I heard that Jordan, a.k.a Jordan Mooney had written a book when Steve Jones interviewed Chrissie Hynde on Jonesy's Jukebox. Although not a musician, she was as an important part of the 1970s UK punk movement as the bands, especially because of her groundbreaking experimental looks. She was best known as sort of the gatekeeper of Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren's shops on King’s Row, SEX, later Seditionaries and later, as manager of Adam and the Ants. You couldn't avoid seeing her and noticing that big blonde beehive, rubber clothes, and blacked out eyes in many of the early photographs and videos.
Jordan gives a unique perspective to the scene that could only come from her but what I really liked about this book was essentially her history lesson of everyone and everything artistically coming out of England during that time, complete with footnotes! She knew fashion people, artists, writers, actors, filmmakers, musicians and was there for all the early days of the Sex Pistols during their rapid rise and fall. It's written with honesty and empathy and with so much detail, it felt like the closest thing to being there since I read Jon Savage’s "England’s Dreaming".