Revue de presse:
A rollicking read....a tale of hedonism and opportunism, of great hope and dashed expectations (MAIL ON SUNDAY)
A grade, A list oral history...through this shifting, twisting narrative, Rachel creates a potent record (THE SUNDAY TIMES)
Entertaining (OBSERVER)
Rachel proves himself, again, the Studs Terkel of British pop political movements, delivering a brilliantly polyphonic pop-cultural history of Britain in the 1990s. Provoking a heady stew of memories for those who lived through it, and acting as a primer for the era for those who missed out, Don't Look In Anger conveys something of the hope, energy, optimism and egalitarianism that seemed to abound then. Things we could perhaps do with rather more of right now (Travis Elborough, author of THE ATLAS OF IMPROBABLE PLACES)
Eminently, moreishly readable (THE NEW STATESMAN)
We guarantee, this will change the way you think about the era you lived through (DAVID HEPWORTH)
The tumult, the triumph and the toilery of the 90s...a who's who of the decade, chocked full of anecdotes from all the runners and riders (SHAUN KEAVENY BBC 6 MUSIC)
I read this book its really good if you are interested in the 1990s (ALAN MCGEE)
Book of the Week (GUARDIAN)
Such a good speaker - precise and thoughtful and funny - and full of great theories and stories. Daniel's got an enviable knack of being able to explain really complicated analysis very clearly. It's so original to read about the 90s that takes in all those different perspectives - politics, art, sport, media etc. - and doesn't just paint a picture of a heap of cocaine with Noel Gallagher in the middle of it (MARK ELLEN, author of ROCK STARS STOLE MY LIFE!)
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