Everything is Great (NoContextBrits): Highlights from the Best Country in the World
By (Author) No Context Brits
Quercus Publishing
Quercus Publishing
28th January 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Media tie-in humour
941
Hardback
224
Width 132mm, Height 178mm, Spine 20mm
253g
We've got rolling green fields filled with pylons delivering fresh electricity to our front doors, ancient woodlands ideal for dogging and dumping old fridges, service stations as far as the eye can see, and millions of citizens quite happy being miserable. Hell, there's even a Greggs on every high street now. What more could Great Britain possibly want
To celebrate Britain achieving peak greatness - and we ain't getting any better, let's be honest - the Internet's favourite meme account, @NoContextBrits, is here to help us navigate the weird world of modern Britain with Everything is Great, a banter-filled celebration of all that is awesome about Britain despite the nagging suspicion the nation is diving head first into a death spiral. Luckily, we've got the greatest cuisine, the greatest weather, the greatest drivers, the greatest police, the greatest criminals, the greatest pubs, the greatest language, and the greatest citizens in the world to help us keep calm and carry on. If we didn't, we'd be f***ed. This pocket-size guide to Britain is a memoir - or meme-oir, if you will - of all that is tasty and delicious about being British without being all crazy and jingoistic about it.Dean Kinsella is the brains, braun and brilliance behind No Context Brits, the highly popular and influential social media account that pretty much goes viral with every post. With more than 1.8 million followers on Twitter (now X) and more than one billion monthly online impressions, @NoContextBrits is the place to go to get your daily fix of all that's broken and brilliant - and bonkers - about modern Britain. Dean began the account on April fools Day in 2021 and hasn't take a day off from creating and sharing funny and thought-provoking memes ever since. Dean lives in Liverpool, the UK's second worst city to live in, according to a 2023 survey.