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Faber & Faber Hardback English

Blitz

The Club That Created the Eighties

By Robert Elms

Regular price £20.00 £17.00 Save 15%
Unit price
per
15% off

Faber & Faber Hardback English

Blitz

The Club That Created the Eighties

By Robert Elms

Regular price £20.00 £17.00 Save 15%
Unit price
per
 
Dispatched today with FREE Tracked Delivery
Delivery expected between Wednesday, 8th July and Thursday, 9th July
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  • A history of the club that set the ‘80s alight, by the much-loved presenter, writer and Blitz attendee Robert Elms. The short-lived Blitz club in London’s Covent Garden was more than somewhere to hang out or be seen: it was a catalyst for cultural explosion, a counter-culture blast against everything Thatcher's leadership had ushered in by the dawn of the 80s. Tuesday nights boasted a ferocious, fearless cast – from Boy George and Spandau Ballet to Grayson Perry and Peter Doig, to Michele Clapton, Sade and Alexander McQueen. This was the vanguard of a different England; socially liberal, loud, proud and diverse, fiercely individualistic and determined to succeed. Britain was black and white; the Blitz Kids switched on the colour. In Blitz, Elms reflects on a club night founded by working-class kids, one whose impact reverberated beyond its doors, through the worlds of Art, Literature, Fashion and Music, and into the present day.
A history of the club that set the ‘80s alight, by the much-loved presenter, writer and Blitz attendee Robert Elms. The short-lived Blitz club in London’s Covent Garden was more than somewhere to hang out or be seen: it was a catalyst for cultural explosion, a counter-culture blast against everything Thatcher's leadership had ushered in by the dawn of the 80s. Tuesday nights boasted a ferocious, fearless cast – from Boy George and Spandau Ballet to Grayson Perry and Peter Doig, to Michele Clapton, Sade and Alexander McQueen. This was the vanguard of a different England; socially liberal, loud, proud and diverse, fiercely individualistic and determined to succeed. Britain was black and white; the Blitz Kids switched on the colour. In Blitz, Elms reflects on a club night founded by working-class kids, one whose impact reverberated beyond its doors, through the worlds of Art, Literature, Fashion and Music, and into the present day.