Croydonopolis: A Journey to the Greatest City That Never Was

£18.99
ISBN
9781838405199
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The town of Croydon is often invoked as a byword for the banal. But its hidden history reveals it consistently to have been at the centre of things, and leading the way: continental air travel, brutalist architecture, punk rock, black musicians from nineteenth to twenty-first century. Now, Will Noble tells Croydon's surprising, remarkable story.
D. H. Lawrence and David Bowie struggled with being there. Comedians have found it a convenient trope for philistinism and the banal. The 'Croydon facelift' succeeded 'Essex girls' as a snobbish putdown. Riots and burning buildings in 2011 didn't help.

And yet this town halfway between London and Brighton can claim a remarkably distinguished - and hidden - history at the centre of things.

No fewer than 11 archbishops are buried there. Continental air travel - from London's first airport - began there. In the sixties it was a daring experiment in futuristic brutalist architecture. Its contribution to black culture began with our most notable black composer and culminated in the first black British artist to headline Glastonbury. Its Brit School produced everyone from Adele to Amy Winehouse and Raye. Still want to diss Croydon?

Croydonopolis tells the amazing story of this much-maligned town, whose only fault was to be too far ahead of the curve, and always go for broke.
More Information
Weight 0.400000
Author Noble, Will
Availability IP
Department History
Format Hardback
ISBN 9781838405199
Pages 256
Published 09/09/2024
Publisher Safehaven Books
Section History
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