Dog Days In Soho: One Man's Adventures In Fifties Bohemia)

Dog Days In Soho: One Man's Adventures In Fifties Bohemia)

by NigelRichardson (Author)

Synopsis

Nigel Richardson first met Josh Avery when he was a boy, but it was only much later that he got to know him well. Richardson was fascinated by the rich fund of anecdotes of Avery's life in and around the post-war Soho demi-monde that included Daniel Farson, William Empson, George Barker, Henrietta Moraes, John Minton - and, most notably, Francis Bacon. Richardson was never quite sure if the stories were true or not - and the obituaries when Josh died made the same point, while revealing tantalising glimpses of stories still untold. But it seemed not to matter. In Dog Days in Soho Richardson has woven a life of Josh that might be true in every detail, or might not. Employing the same technique as in his highly acclaimed Breakfast in Brighton, he has produced a book which captures the essence of a time and a place now gone. It is a magnificent achievement.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Phoenix
Published: 03 May 2001

ISBN 10: 057540342X
ISBN 13: 9780575403420
Book Overview: Soho is a place of perpetual fascination, and this book is about the time when it was a bohemia worthy of the name From the author of Breakfast in Brighton, which has reprinted five times in six months and received widespread critical acclaim: 'Richardson is a powerful and companionable storyteller ... his version of the town is wild, bright and unashamedly affectionate' The Times 'Richardson's writing has now the restrained elegance and now the meretricious flashiness of its subject' Spectator 'Laugh-aloud, touching, sometimes mildly surrealistic ... This is a surprisingly ambitious book, full of good-fun phrasing and those curious factive fictions that lurk on the border between literature and human topography' Independent.

Author Bio
Born 1957, ed Christ's Hospital, Reading University. Works as a journalist, currently deputy travel editor of the Daily Telegraph