Erm..............
Ok so this book concerning my home city felt like a self-indulgent, name dropping reminiscence of a time when "everything was better when I was a lad"!! Was it though?
Young bangs on about how much better, richer and wholesome the city was in the 60's when he was growing up, but he spends a lot of his own childhood chasing history, retracing the steps of writers like Ginsberg and Burroughs, artists and singers, following Ken Dodd round shops in the town!
I always feel that people doing what Young is doing, searching round a city in the present for ghosts of the past, will always be disappointed. Places of childhood are always superior in the mind precisely because they were present in childhood- the epitome of good times, freedom to roam, time to explore and discover (depending on the childhood of course). Places move on and so do we. The world turns, and cities become parodies of themselves, modernising into retrospectives of what people expect from a place. People think of Liverpool as "The Beatles Experience" or Matthew Street or Cavern Walks, but the city of childhood is whatever your experience of it was.
The only passage I resonate with in Young's book is this:-
"I'm convinced that the city is suffering from geopathic stress, from the negative energy of 'black streams'. The city is depressed because its immune system is broken, and while it is slumbering in a kind of chronic fatigue syndrome that afflicts neglected cities, the warlocks and hobgoblins move in and ransack the place, which leads to blindness, paranormal activity and a surplus of wedding hotels"
I agree with this but the city has always had negative energy and chronic fatigue syndrome, it's just evolved from a fag smoking, phlegm spitting, flat cap wearing, heavy drinking city into a metropolitan, skinny jean wearing, shoes without socks, man bun amalgam of not so responsible responsible drinking! And there will always be old men like Young (and my dad), propping the bar up, denouncing modernisation and lamenting the days of yore and how superior they were!