One summer: America 1927. By Bill Bryson. So much happened in America in 1927 that you will know about.
"It was the summer — if one allows “summer” to occasionally include parts of both spring and fall — that Babe Ruth hit 60 home runs, much of the country was engulfed by a catastrophic flood, Jack Dempsey lost the famous “long count” fight to Gene Tunney, Calvin Coolidge announced he wouldn’t run for another term, the world’s leading bankers made the policy adjustment that would do so much to bring down Wall Street in 1929, “The Jazz Singer” was released, radio and tabloid culture came into their own, an American audience got its first public demonstration of television, work started on Mount Rushmore, Sacco and Vanzetti were executed, and Henry Ford stopped making Model T’s. And oh, yes, most of the world went mad over a 25-year-old prodigy named Charles Lindbergh, who flew a flimsy plane to Paris from New York.
This isn’t to mention all the other fascinating characters Bill Bryson brings splendidly to life in “One Summer” — people like Al Capone and Dorothy Parker; Philo T. Farnsworth, the young man who played a critical role in inventing the television; and the New York Times reporter Richards Vidmer, who married a rajah’s daughter and was “also perhaps the most memorably dreadful sportswriter ever.”
The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists.
I am getting more left wing as I age.
A colleague recommended RTP, so I ordered it from Amazon (slight irony there, really), brand new for £1. Bargain - it does give pause for thoughtMy best friend's dad, who sort of became my stepdad after my father died young gave me a copy of that book, it's one of the few books that has caused me to shed a tear, as one of my trades is decorating it's also fascinating from the technical aspect.
I should re-read it it but the pages are yellowing and falling out, I should buy another copy.
Three best books I've ever read.
The Ragged Trousered Philanthropist
One day in the life of Ivan Denisovicz
Catch 22
Kurt Vonnegut Jnr did a few good 'uns as well.
Oh, and The Moons a balloon by David Niven.
A colleague recommended RTP, so I ordered it from Amazon (slight irony there, really), brand new for £1. Bargain - it does give pause for thought
I will look into Ivan, and re read catch 22. I read the latter as a youngster but probably did not fully get it. Around the same time I read Fahrenheit 451 - another strong read.My best friend's dad, who sort of became my stepdad after my father died young gave me a copy of that book, it's one of the few books that has caused me to shed a tear, as one of my trades is decorating it's also fascinating from the technical aspect.
I should re-read it it but the pages are yellowing and falling out, I should buy another copy.
Three best books I've ever read.
The Ragged Trousered Philanthropist
One day in the life of Ivan Denisovicz
Catch 22
Kurt Vonnegut Jnr did a few good 'uns as well.
Oh, and The Moons a balloon by David Niven.
The author is anonymous, Robert Tressle is a pseudonym. The book is credited with giving birth to the Labour Party and Trade Union movements.
That's a great achievement.
What would they think of self employed doctors with million pound pension pots demanding two million pound pension pots.
Unless I am very much mistaken, he is not anonymous. He died age 41 from, IIRC, consumption and was a tradesman and sign writer . Tressel was, indeed, a pseudonym, based on, apparently “Trestle”.
The book was published just befor WW1, AFTER he died.
I will look into Ivan,
I used to read that at bedtime then imagine I was getting my head down outside in the heather.Five on a treasure island, a classic