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Strange Days Indeed: The Golden Age of Paranoia

Strange Days Indeed: The Golden Age of Paranoia
By Francis Wheen

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Product Description

Strange Days Indeed, by Francis Wheen. The nostalgic whiff of the seventies evokes memories of loons and disco, Abba and Fawlty Towers. However, beneath the long hair it was really a theme park of mass paranoia. Strange Days Indeed tells the story of the decade that a young Francis Wheen walked into having pronounced he was dropping out to join the alternative society. Instead of the optimistic dreams of the sixties he found a world on the verge of a collective nervous breakdown, huddled over candles waiting for the next terrorist bomb, kidnapping or food shortage warning. Whether it was Nixon's demented behaviour in the White House, Harold Wilson's insistence that 'they' (whoever 'they' were) were out to get him, or the trial of Rupert Bear, it is a story almost too fantastical to be true. With his brilliantly acute sense of the absurd Francis Wheen slices through the pungent melange of mistrust and conspiratorial fever to expose the sickly form of a decade in which nations were brought to a sclerotic halt by power cuts, military coups, economic anarchy and the arrival of Uri Geller. Since the Great Crash of our generation barely a week passes without some allusion to that distant decade. As we are consumed by the heady stench of our own collective meltdown, there is no better guide than Francis Wheen to shine his Swiftian light on the true nature of the era that has returned to haunt us. Amidst the chaos Strange Days Indeed is an hilarious and jaw-droppingly revealing chronicle of the golden age of the paranoid style.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1234 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-09-03
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 388 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
`delightfully unorthodox history..The strangest decade has received the treatment it has long deserved' Book of The Week Time Out --Book of The Week Time Out

`This gallery of grotesques is great fun' TLS --TLS

`fascinating, wonderfully funny and curiously terrifying' Waterstones Books Quarterly
--Waterstones Books Quarterly

`wonderfully deadpan and precise writer' The Scotsman --The Scotsman

`Wheen expertly controls the reins, pacing the narrative just right so there is always the desire to be led further into the maze of `70's madness. Wheen is surely our most eminent satirical writer, and I just hope that he is looking at our present decade through the same lens, and is just as busy getting that book ready' Tribune --Tribune

`Wheen's view of the Seventies in Britain is unrelentingly grim' The Spectator
--The Spectator

`hugely entertaining..Wheen has a tremendous sense of the absurd' Independent on Sunday --INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY

`What makes this book such an outrageously funny, entertaining read is the stream of anecdotes, from the Oz obscenity trial to the mercenary coup plotters who fly into the Seychelles posing as rugby-playing members of the fictitious Ancient Order of Froth Blowers, their weapons hidden in their luggage under piles of toys 'for disabled children'. Not even the most outrageous novelist could make this kind of stuff up, but perhaps only a writer of Francis Wheen's skill and touch could turn it into a book as glorious, memorable and laugh-out-loud hilarious as this.' Literary Review --LITERARY REVIEW

'Wheen's high-octaine, rollicking and impressionistic survey' Mail on Sunday --MAIL ON SUNDAY

`In a dozen fluent chapters of potted biography and cultural history, he sketches a broad jittery panorama' Guardian
-- GUARDIAN

Chosen as an Observer 'Book of the Year' by Melvyn Bragg
--Observer

Chosen by Patrick Bishop as Book of the Year
--Evening Standard

About the Author
Francis Wheen is an author and journalist who was named Columnist of the Year for his contributions to the Guardian. He a regular contributor to Private Eye and is the author of several books, including a highly acclaimed biography of Karl Marx which has been translated into twenty-two languages and the bestselling How Mumbo-Jumbo Conquered the World. He recently wrote the screen play for The Lavender List, a biopic on Harold Wilson's last days in government. His collected journalism, Hoo-Hahs and Passing Frenzies, won the George Orwell prize in 2003.


Customer Reviews

The Seventies Comedown.5
Its a common allegory to compare the sixties to the hedonistic party while the seventies was its hangover, but coupled with the sour anxiety at the time ran an even deeper, all-pervasive band of post-excess malaise, rampant paranoia.

The cast here are Nixon and Kissinger acting like Bond Villians, a button-press from a world destroying nuclear arsenal; Wilson and his huddled, terrified acolytes in Downing Street, Uri Gellar and a milion bending spoons, and numerous other mad or maddening characters, acted out against a canvas of drab, the psychadelic rainbows of the previous decade now drained to various shades of grey, lurching deeper into stagnation, fear and gloom. If you've ever read Wheen's previous pieces on the Seventies (theres a couple of choice cuts in 'Hoo-hahs and Passing Frenzies')you'll know what to expect.

As with every book, indeed everything Wheen has ever written, this is Grade A Unputdownable. His style is hilarious yet terrifying, his research deep and thorough, and his eye for the absurd sharp. The anotations come thick and fast, each one a juicy little side order to the main course you'll wolf down.

How the hell we got out of the decade without revolution, right wing coup or nuclear annhiliation remains a mystery, but Im only glad I wasn't around till 1973, and 3 Day Weeks, Crazed Presidents and paranoid PMs meant rather less to me than Watership Down, Star wars and Floella Benjamin.

A great companion piece to David Aaronovitch's very fine 'Voodoo Histories'...but wait. Two brilliant books on paranoic conspiracy out at the same time...there must be a more sinister connection...

Up to scratch5
The idea that a decade can be defined by events or a prevailing mood is open to question but Francis Wheen has used it to rest his thirteen pieces of writing on.

Whether or not the 'decadist' approach is credible is a moot point here because whenever Wheen writes he is never less than interesting and entertaining.

His fans won't be disappointed.

Conspiracy theory upon theory 5
A really mind opening insight into the conspiracy theories behind the conspiracy theories. (amazingly) the FACTS behind the deepest and daftest plots and plans from the 60's onwards.

So if you want to know about: the Kennedy's, Watergate, Vietnam War, Wilson (my favourite chapter), the Winter of Discontent...etc etc then read this book.

Hilarious, worrying, insightful and frankly.... shocking.

I loved it!