Editorial 

In praise of… David Kynaston

Editorial: The historian has reached the 1960s in his account of postwar Britain
  
  

The opening day of Britain's first motorway, the M1, in 1959.
The opening day of Britain’s first motorway, the M1, in 1959. Photograph: PA Photograph: taken from picture library

To open any volume of David Kynaston’s history of postwar Britain is to experience the next best thing to time travel. In Mr Kynaston’s books the reader is drawn into a kaleidoscopic recreation, artfully weaving together diaries, letters, newspapers and increasingly, as the project reaches the 1960s, television programmes. These telling fragments form a richly textured whole. This week, the sixth volume appeared, covering events from the opening of the M1 in 1959 to the Beatles’ first recording session with George Martin in 1962. A unifying theme is the demolition of 19th-century urban landmarks – from the Gorbals to the Euston Arch – and their replacement by tower blocks and shopping centres. T Dan Smith, not yet disgraced, bestrides the end of this volume. Mr Kynaston’s sequence is a dazzling achievement. The good news is that, at this rate, he still has six more volumes in him before he arrives at journey’s end in 1979.

 

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