In My Life: A Music Memoir

In My Life: A Music Memoir

by Alan Johnson (Author)

Synopsis

'Warmth, wit and honesty make this such a satisfying read' Daily Mail Supermarket worker, postman, union official, father of three. Dansettes, dancehalls, smoky pubs, rock-n-roll West London. There are two sides to Alan Johnson. ___________________ From the moment a young Alan Johnson first twanged the strings of his plastic 'Tommy Steele' guitar, he was determined to become a rock star. Alan's life has always been lived to a musical soundtrack. His earliest memories of the bleak, post-war, pre-rock 'n' roll west London landscape into which he was born are suffused with the melodies that wafted from the rented Bakelite wireless in the slum where he lived with his frail mother and dauntless sister. His love affair with pop music blossomed alongside the music itself, which exploded into being in the mid-1950s and came to embody the iconoclastic spirit of a new era. In this memoir, Alan looks back at his pursuit of rock stardom through the music that accompanied it - on vinyl, cassette tape or blasting from the stages of the Marquee club in Soho or the Wimbledon Palais; the sounds of Chuck Berry and Lonnie Donegan, of the Yardbirds and Dylan, of Bowie, Elvis Costello and Springsteen . . . not forgetting the Beatles, the band he has worshipped since 1963. In My Life recalls with affection a vanished world of Flower Power and platform shoes. Honest, poignant and very funny, it is more than just a nostalgic celebration of music: it offers a new perspective on the singular life of Alan Johnson the man. ___________________ PRAISE FOR IN MY LIFE: 'Radiates the author's easygoing charm' Spectator 'Loving slice of social history' Daily Express 'Very readable' New Statesman 'Charming memoir' Mail on Sunday

$3.36

Save:$10.90 (76%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
Publisher: Corgi
Published: 27 Jun 2019

ISBN 10: 0552174769
ISBN 13: 9780552174763
Book Overview: Before he became one of the most respected and liked political figures of the past two decades, Alan Johnson wanted to be a rock 'n' roll star. This is the warm, funny and affecting story of how he nearly made it...

Media Reviews
What a lovely writer he is: funny. modest, unsentimental and utterly without self-pity . . . warmth, wit and honesty make this such a satisfying read. -- Marcus Berkmann * DAILY MAIL *
Radiates the author's easygoing charm . . . at the peak of his youthful fame he auditioned for a band called the Jaywalkers . . . alas he was unsuccessful. Who knows what might have been? But what the pop world lost, the world of politics gained. -- Chris Mullin * SPECTATOR *
His charming memoir details the ways in which records by his heroes . . . have formed the soundtrack to his life. * MAIL ON SUNDAY 'Books of the Year' *
This memoir will give you that warm glow of finding a friend who shares your passions . . . In this loving slice of social history, he beautifully mixes that passion with the story of a young man growing up and succeeding in post-war Britain. * DAILY EXPRESS *
In prose and in person, Johnson has always had an everyman likeability . . . his take on the good old days is sparely unsentimental . . . very readable. -- Stuart Maconie * NEW STATESMAN *
Author Bio
Alan Johnson was born in May 1950. He is a British Labour Party politician who served as Home Secretary from June 2009 to May 2010. Before that he filled a wide variety of cabinet positions in both the Blair and Brown governments, including Health Secretary and Education Secretary. Until 20 January 2011 he was Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer. Johnson was the Member of Parliament for Hull West and Hessle until his retirement from politics in 2017. His first book, This Boy, won the RSL Ondaatje Prize and the Orwell Prize in 2013. His second, Please Mister Postman, won the National Book Award for Autobiography of the Year in 2014. His third, The Long and Winding Road, was published in 2016 and won the Parliamentary Book Award for Best Memoir.