Postcard From The Past
By (Author) Tom Jackson
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
7th November 2019
31st October 2019
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Places in old photographs
Humour collections and anthologies
741.683
Paperback
176
Width 208mm, Height 150mm, Spine 13mm
300g
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY MARK HADDON
In Postcard From The Past, Tom Jackson has gathered a collection of the funniest, weirdest and most moving real messages from the backs of old postcards.
Sublimely funny Jason Hazeley, author of the Ladybird Books for Grown Ups
My favourite Twitter account is now my favourite book. Irresistible! Jill Mansell
This book is an absolute treat Holly Walsh
Transfixing, beguiling, warmly haunting. These are the ghosts of a childhood Robin Ince
A hilarious and occasionally disturbing look at how the British remain resolutely small-minded wherever they go Charlie Higson
Six by four inch portions of pure heaven Rachel Johnson
Somehow both poignant and deeply creepy Samira Ahmed
One of Twitters most nourishing concepts each one arriving like a bonsai Alan Bennett play Danny Baker
Beautiful. Inspiring. Educational. Hilarious Emma Freud
One of the saddest and funniest picture books you're ever likely to read Owen Hatherley, author of The Ministry of Nostalgia
Hilarious, haunting, silly, poetic and profound Danny Wallace
A book of rare and genuine beauty James OBrien, LBC
Resurrecting these postcards, relics of forgotten times and forgotten holidays, was the simplest and most brilliant idea. Tom Jackson combines the images with just a few of the words scribbled on the back, and his eye for the choice sentence, the perfect phrase, is miraculous. Thanks to his assiduous, obsessive work as collector and curator, each one of these postcards becomes a poem, a short story, an elegy for lost England, a work of art Jonathan Coe
What a funny, clever, poignant idea. Postcard From The Past contains not just 150 very short stories, each one of which bears comparison with the work of Alan Bennett, Stevie Smith and Marcel Proust, but also lovely, picturesque views of coves, chines, promenades, escarpments and the Museum and Art Gallery, Doncaster. You will wish you were there Andy Miller, author of The Year of Reading Dangerously
A deadpan miscellany of wan nostalgia, profound melancholy, stoic humour and inexplicable dread. The necessary survival text for post-Brexit Britain Andrew Male
'I loved this book so very much. Sometimes hilarious, sometimes heartbreaking, this is a beautiful collection of tiny windows into the stories of other people's lives Joanna Cannon, author of The Trouble with Goats and Sheep
Brilliant and hilarious Jeremy Dyson, The League of Gentlemen
The most addictively British Twitter feed ever has become a book. I may never leave the house again Viv Groskop
Each card is like an unfinished one act play. I find myself filling in the blanks Adrian Edmondson
The bleak yet beautiful poetry of people at their leisure is a joy to read Phill Jupitus
A gorgeous pre-Twitter look at life through a holiday lens Jenny clair
Are there awards for Most Hilarious Yet Touching Yet Profound Bathroom/Coffee Table/Gift Book of the Year If so, this book wins HANDS DOWN Amanda Palmer
Tom Jackson started putting old postcards on Twitter in 2016. He lives in South London.
@pastpostcard