Soho in the Eighties

Soho in the Eighties

by Christopher Howse (Author)

Synopsis

In the 1980s Daniel Farson published Soho in the Fifties. This memoir is a sequel from the Eighties, a decade that saw the brilliant flowering of a daily tragi-comedy enacted in pubs like the Coach and Horses or the French and in drinking clubs like the Colony Room. These were places of constant conversation and regular rows fuelled by alcohol. The cast was more improbable than any soap opera. Some were widely known - Jeffrey Bernard, Francis Bacon, Tom Baker or John Hurt. Just as important were the character actors: the Village Postmistress, the Red Baron, Granny Smith. The bite came from the underlying tragedy: lost spouses, lost jobs, pennilessness, homelessness and death. Christopher Howse recaptures the lost Soho he once knew as home, its cellar cafes and butchers' shops, its villains and its generosity. While it lasted, time in those smoky rooms always seemed to be half past ten, not long to closing time. As the author relates, he never laughed so much as he did in Soho in the Eighties.

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 288
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Bloomsbury Continuum
Published: 06 Sep 2018

ISBN 10: 1472914805
ISBN 13: 9781472914804
Book Overview: A fascinating glimpse into 1980s Soho by leading journalist and writer Christopher Howse

Media Reviews
Howse is Soho's Boswell ... this is an astonishing piece of reportage ... It is also a piece of social history that will be vital in future decades for anyone who wants to know what Soho was really like. * Harry Mount, The Tablet *
Elegiac ... [a] sensitive, well-drawn book * Will Self, Guardian *
Opening this book is like walking into a heavy drinkers' pub ... Fortunately the Virgil guiding readers through this particular hell is Christopher Howse ... Thorough and likeable * Financial Times *
Howse is [...] such a deft sketcher of people that we feel as if we do know them * Daily Telegraph *
Honesty is the thread that holds his book together. It WAS like that * Nicholas Lezard, Spectator *
In Soho in the Eighties Howse chronicles a doomed world of poets, painters, retired prostitutes, actors, criminals, musicians and general layabouts * The Times *
Like a prose poem by Philip Larkin * Daily Mail *
Author Bio
Christopher Howse is a writer and assistant editor at the Daily Telegraph, where he spent some years editing the obituaries page. He is a regular contributor to The Spectator and his books include The Train in Spain, Sacred Mysteries and A Pilgrim in Spain.