Days In The Life
By (Author) Jonathon Green
Vintage
Pimlico
15th March 2016
2nd April 1998
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
Biography: philosophy and social sciences
941.0856
Paperback
480
Width 138mm, Height 216mm, Spine 32mm
515g
Vastly etertaining, highly illuminating and not a little moving. . . Days in the Life is undoubtedly the best available summery of its period and milieu, and will probably remain so for quite some time to come. Jonothan Green offers a time trip from lat-fifties CND, beatniks and bop to the threshold of our own decade's designer revolutionaries and style warriors. . . His chosen form is the oral history pioneered by Studs Terkel in which cross-cut voices recount a shared experience or epoch. . . what anecdotes!'Guardian. Green has collected 101 quintessential sixties groovers and lovingly teased out their memories, all of them refreshingly self-critical and remarkably sharpened by hindsight. 'Glasgow Herald. `This is the first publication I've seen on the 1960s to address all closely the question- how did it feel in that dawn to be alive. . . An action packed tapestry of illuminating flashbacks. 'Spectator.
This is the first publication I've seen on the 1960s to address all closely the question: how did it feel in that dawn to be alive * Herald *
An action packed tapestry of illuminating flashbacks * Spectator *
Jonathon Green is one of the worlds leading lexicographers of English-language slang. His most recent dictionaries are Greens Dictionary of Slang (3 vols, 2010) and the Chambers Slang Dictionary (2008). Among other slang-related titles he has also written The Slang Thesaurus, Slang Down the Ages: The Historical Development of Slang and Crooked Talk: The Language of Underworld. His history of lexicography Chasing the Sun: Dictionary-Makers and the Dictionaries They Made was published by Jonathan Cape in 1996.
During the hippie era that forms the background for Days in the Life he worked on various underground newspapers, notably Rolling Stone, Friends, Oz, IT and Time Out. He has also written oral histories focussed on immigration (Them, 1990) and sex (It, 1993). The Sound of the Streets: a History of Slang is due for publication in 2014 and he is currently working on a memoir of 30 years of slang lexicography: Odd Job Man, to be published by Jonathan Cape.