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Back In Time For Dinner
Back In Time For Dinner
Oct 19, 2024 3:54 PM

Author:Mary Gwynn

Back In Time For Dinner

Do you remember the arrival of the fish finger, the rise and fall of Angel Delight, Vesta curries and Wimpy hamburgers? Did you own a fondue set or host a Tupperware party, or were you starving yourself on the Cabbage Soup Diet? Was life always too short to stuff a mushroom? And what was the point of Nouvelle Cuisine?

There has been a revolution in our kitchens. In 1950, the average housewife worked a seventy-five-hour week. No one owned a fridge or had seen a teabag, let alone an avocado or a Curly Wurly . Ten years later, sugar consumption had rocketed: we ate more biscuits for dinner than vegetables and fruit. It was not until the mid 1990s that we started to worry about ‘five a day’. And now, nearly twenty years on from the first vegetable-box delivery scheme, we are fatter than ever before . . . Has there ever been a golden age of the family meal?

Full of delicious detail, this marvellous companion to the BBC series is rich with nostalgia and provides a feast of extraordinary factual nuggets. Who can guess the filling of the first pre-packed sandwich in 1984? And who could have foreseen then that a kitchen robot that can write your shopping list is now just around the corner?

Reflecting all the fads and fashions that have graced our table, Back in Time for Dinner is much more than a book about dinner; it holds a mirror to our changing family lives.

Reviews

Depending on your age, there'll be many foods and fads in here you'll remember with either fondness or disgust. A fascinating trip down our culinary Memory Lane, an eye-opening insight into how our eating habits have changed or have been changed, and a brilliant taster for the BBC TV series which is accompanies. A veritable feast of a book!

—— Sunday Sport

A book with plenty of interesting facts that mirrors a changing world

—— Best of British

If you have fond memories of Spam, Angel Delight, Vesta curries or even the Cabbage Soup Diet, and enjoyed the BBC Two TV programme Back In Time For Dinner, then Mary Gwynn's nostalgic book will be a real treat! It's full of fascinating facts about the food that nation has loved since the 1950s and what's come into - and gone out of - fashion.

—— BBC Easy Cook

Part Day of the Jackal, part James Bond . . . a wonderful page-turner with a plot that would make a great action movie . . . an action-packed romp that Ian Fleming would be proud of.

—— SFFWORLD

RECIPE for a great debut book: 1) Mix two parts of Brit 1950s war thriller; 2) add a chunk of Indiana Jones and a dollop of Dr Who; 3) thicken the plot with a devil-may-care killer and a demon Nazi and; 4) cook it on a steady-paced heat. A Kill in the Morning should be a bonkers read, but it's served up so well it delivers even more than its cover blurb promises - and that's plenty. Bloody good work, Mr Shimmin.

—— WEEKEND SPORT

Compelling . . . a page-turning thriller with a twist of SF . . . enough guns and girls to keep things interesting. I very much enjoyed it

—— SFCROWSNEST

Crisp and enjoyable

—— SFX magazine

The book is tremendous . . . a fascinating concept and Shimmin makes the most of it . . . A Kill in the Morning is a thriller and thrills is what you get . . . the action is crisp, well-written, and intense

—— TERRY IRVING, author of Courier

A great mix of pure pulp entertainment. Shimmin has combined a slightly campy Bond style hero with a pulp ‘Commando’ comic style and a twist that you won’t see coming . . . great fun

—— BOOKBAG blog

Genius . . . an exciting rollercoaster of a novel . . . successfully weaves classic spy adventure fiction with superbly researched main characters and wonderful attention to historical detail . . . my favourite book of the year

—— NE LIFESTYLE magazine

Lucid, passionate, urgent

—— Rory MacLean

This is first class history and in a year swamped with First World War centenary books, it’s the one you should read first

—— Andrew Roberts

A compelling and fascinating read...a shadowy assassin brought to life by an writer who gets to grips with a century of Balkan intrigue

—— Kate Adie

A marvellously absorbing book... A triumph of research, it will appeal to the layman and historian alike

—— Ian Thomson , Financial Times

Extremely well written, taut and evocative... Despite its complex subject, Butcher makes this an easy and engaging read with his breezy style and fascinating encounters

—— Misha Glenny , Daily Telegraph

Illuminating... Butcher achieves something remarkable with Princip. He promotes him quite plausibly from mad man to everyman; a warning to the future whom the future foolishly forgot

—— Giles Whittell , The Times

Arguably the most important story of the war

—— Michael Hodges , Mail on Sunday

As a travel writer, Butcher takes some beating. He packs balls as well as ballpoints

—— John Lewis-Stempel , Sunday Express

A triumph of storytelling... [A] highly original gem of a book

—— Victor Sebestyen , Spectator

Informative and powerful

—— John Horne , Irish Times

A page-turning exploration of how the forgotten past continues to inform the present... Important, and relevant

—— Oliver Poole , Independent on Sunday

[Princip’s] story as Butcher now tells it has a resonance far beyond the Balkans

—— Iain Morris , Observer

Elegant, horrifying and enlightening… A book which is not only a good piece of detective work, it is the finest contribution so far this year to the rapidly expanding literature on the Great War

—— Mark Smith , Herald

Tim Butcher has produced the most imaginative and singular book on the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War to date. It is a lot more than a study of Princip… It is a piece of expeditionary journalism, an investigation in time, place and spirit, of the highest order

—— Robert Fox , Scotsman

A revealing insight into the mind and journey of the boy who escaped the narrow confines of his village, and whose political aspirations for his native country had such far-reaching effects on the world

—— Philippa Logan , Oxford Times

Utterly absorbing… If journalism is the first draft of history, Butcher marries both disciplines with boldness and originality – as well as sympathy for his shadowy subject

—— BBC History Magazine

Insightful and entertaining, this blows the cobwebs off the history of that day

—— Evening Echo (Cork)

Positive proof that fact can be as gripping as fiction…rich and timely… Amongst so many books published around the anniversary of the First World War, this one stands out

—— CGA Magazine

A fascinating investigation… An absorbing read

—— Irish Independent

Despite its serious subject matter, the book is a rollicking read, full of amusing details and sarcastic humour

—— The Economist

A brilliant and haunting journey through the Balkans

—— Sinclair McKay , Daily Telegraph

In the centenary year of the death of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, what better read than Tim Butcher’s The Trigger

—— Paul Routledge , Tablet

[A] fascinating and lively history

—— 4 stars , Daily Telegraph

Very complex – but you will grasp it

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

A fascination exploration

—— Mail on Sunday

Highly readable but profoundly researched, The Trigger represents a bold exception to the deluge of First World War books devoted to mud, blood and poetry

—— Ben Macintyre , The Times

a fascinating original portrait of a man and his country

—— Country and Town House
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