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Yes We Have No
Yes We Have No
Oct 1, 2024 5:42 AM

Author:Nik Cohn

Yes We Have No

There will always be an England, no doubt, but what sort of England will it be? Cohn takes a long wild ride through a country he calls the Republic - a nation within a nation, populated by the many millions who have either fallen out of the Britannic mainstream, or chosen to jump. He meets the rising stars of a new culture, and also the casualties. Their collected stories, both weird and wonderful, combine to form a tapestry quite unlike any notion of England that has ever existed before. It is a land made up, among others, of outlaws and insurgents, rampaging natives, second-generation immigrants, visionaries, born-agains, football fans, fetishists, New Age travellers, anarchists, DJs, street-fighters, graffiti artists, Rastas, Odinists, Elvis impersonators, fire-swallowers and even the Antichrist. Loud and angry, and charged with furious energy, their voices define a world cut loose from tradition and all certainty. Gone bananas, in fact. Nik Cohn's republic may not be the only England out there. But it's the most vivid.

Reviews

A collection of highly crafted historical-archaeological microessays, each centred on a significant place in Britain or Ireland. Few popular history books are as pleasingly tactile as this one..a vivid, pungent history

—— James McConnachie , TLS

This book brilliantly demonstrates Neil's mastery of the broad sweep of British history and landscape.

—— Dan Snow

In his introduction Neil Oliver calls the British ‘a lucky, blessed people’, and his book holds up a mirror to that national self-image. Oliver’s timeline journey travels from prehistoric footprints off the Norfolk coast to the Ozymandias folly of the Millennium Dome, from a tiny, exquisite jewel crafted for King Alfred the Great to great enigmatic stone forts in the West of Ireland that are being eaten by the sea. Stories we have been telling ourselves for thousands of years are falling on deaf ears or being forgotten, says Oliver. Here in a hundred fascinating doses is the antidote to that millennial malaise.

—— Christopher Somerville, The Times walking correspondent, author of The January Man

Neil Oliver brings his vast experience and expertise to bear on this deeply personal journey into British history - a wonderful read.

—— Alice Roberts

A book of compelling stories.

—— Mail on Sunday

Everyone should have two copies – one for the car and one for the house to plan journeys. It’s a robust rebuke to the satnav – a reminder to think more about the places you pass and less about your route, because every British journey is through rich history.

—— Edward Stourton

A wonderfully engaging tour of Britain and Ireland from the much loved television historian.

—— Books Are My Bag

Unputdownable… this memoir-cum-detective story becomes a remarkable search for truth

—— Charlotte Cox , Sunday Telegraph

A fascinating, beautifully written feat of detective work, evoking bygone Britain during an era when so much was left unsaid

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily Mail, *Book of the Week*

A poetic blend of memoir and detective story… Cumming breathes new life into the form, with her art critic’s analysis of the family photographs which appear on many of the pages

—— Marcus Field , Evening Standard

On Chapel Sands is a fascinating read, as painstaking as an archaeological dig. Laura carefully sifts through years of fact, speculation and omission until the truth comes to light

—— Eithne Farry , Sunday Express

Wonderful, haunting... a poetic study in half-lights and fragments... a moving meditation... It is intimate and yet, at a slant, draws in a larger web of moments beyond the limits of the frame

—— Lucy Lethbridge , Literary Review

This is a clear-eyed and careful portrait of a family unravelling that stands out for the way in which it considers what isn’t being shown as much as what is

—— Sarah Hughes , i

Gripped from the sure-footed imagery of the opening sentence… the fragmentary style of the book gives way to a more lyrical tone… The lyricism of her relationship with images…is this book’s greatest gift

—— Raffaella Barker , Oldie

This utterly enthralling family memoir draws you into a mystery from the childhood of the author's mother... spellbinding... [Cumming] has also woven in photographs and artworks, which beautifully illuminate and complement the narrative

—— Caroline Sanderson , The Bookseller

A modern masterpiece

—— Guardian, *Summer Read of 2019*

An outstanding investigation into a family’s secrets and a revelation of how art enriches life

—— Sunday Times, *Summer Reads of 2019*

There can be no more gripping read than Observer art critic Laura Cumming's On Chapel Sands... Nothing is as it seems right up to the last page of this modern masterpiece

—— James Le Fanu , Tablet, *Summer reads of 2019*

Its pleasures are slow, cumulative and utterly absorbing, it would be the perfect choice for a holiday with long stretches of reading time… A wonderful meditation on the half-truths and half-lights that make up our understanding of a life

—— Lucy Lethbridge , Tablet, *Summer reads of 2019*

An absolute masterpiece. A book bursting with love – love lost and love found, love misunderstood, unsaid and denied. I was spellbound by Laura Cumming’s warm, intelligent, searching voice and her intense scrutiny of images to reveal the unexpected and make us think again. I am in complete awe. A beguilingly lovely book – as big as the sea

—— Keggie Carew, author of Dadland

An absolutely utterly transfixing narrative which I could hardly bear to leave in order to go to sleep at night and which I could not wait to wake up to in the morning, writing of such sublime beauty that I delighted in page after page, and above all a story of such emotional power, not only about Laura’s mother, but also about Laura herself, that sometimes I found myself putting my copy down just to take a moment to breathe

—— Juliet Nicolson, author of A House Full of Daughters

An intricately structured and perfectly written swirl of memoir, history and art: the prose equivalent of beautifully marbled paper. I adored it

—— Adèle Geras

A true masterpiece: an unveiling of family secrets written in prose of the utmost beauty, and an astonishing act of filial love. Read it!

—— Jonathan Coe

Exquisitely written, compelling and painful

—— Amanda Craig

[An] intriguing and beautiful book… Cumming summons a novelist’s skill, making it impossible to stop reading the unravelling story. Every chapter ends with a new discovery, or the potential for one, and right up to the very last page the serpentine revelations twist like an anaconda

—— Sue Gaisford , Tablet

Haunting, luminous and revelatory… one of the best memoirs in recent years

—— Sarah Hughes , i, *Best books of 2019*

[A] compelling, beautifully written book… Chapter by chapter, Cumming slowly pieces together an authentic portrait of her ancestors, a paean dedicated lovingly to her mother

—— Jackie Annesley , Daily Mail

Extraordinary… It is a scrupulously, luminously empathic book, and the work of a masterful storyteller

—— Stephanie Cross , The Lady

A remarkable new book, which blends mystery, memoir, art criticism and Lincolnshire history… The story may be unique but the themes are universal

—— Yusef Sayed , Lincolnshire Life

A profound and beautiful book… Cumming illuminate the darkness of secrets, shame and betrayal and their effects in a riveting book

—— Kirsty McLuckie , Scotland on Sunday

[An] excellent mystery memoir

—— attitude

The story, beautifully written, is enriched by Cumming’s skill at making pictures speak

—— Mark Mazower , Financial Times

On Chapel Sands is as compelling as any detective novel of the golden age. The rigour and pace of the writing, its themes of mistaken identity, confinement and sexual deceit are reminiscent of Josephine Tey

—— Nancy Campbell , Times Literary Supplement

Laura Cumming writes very beautifully and I take real pleasure in the prose

—— Jacqueline Wilson , Time & Leisure

On Chapel Sands is beautifully written, immersive and moving – and it’s one of the finest books of the year

—— Will Gore , Spectator

A haunting investigation into family trauma and secrets from a forgotten England that turns out to lie closer to the surface than anyone suspected. Turning detective, she [Laura Cumming] interrogates old snapshots with the forensic skill of a professional art critic

—— Mark Mazower , New Statesman, *Books of the Year*

On Chapel Sands starts by seeming to be about one kind of mystery but soon starts being about another, much more profound one… the subtlety and suspense of the narrative lies in the way Cumming allows details about their relationship to emerge slowly, like a photograph socking in developing fluid

—— Bee Wilson , London Review of Books

With her critic’s eye, Cumming turns detective to investigate who took her mother and tell a pacy story about relationships, pride and the ramifications of what goes unsaid

—— Susannah Butter , Evening Standard, *Books of the Year*

In a year strong in ingenious memoir, Laura Cumming’s On Chapel Sands…stood out, not just for its great storytelling but for Cumming’s wonderful ability to bring to life a Lincolnshire coastal community…its moods, characters and toxic secret-harbouring machinery

—— Claire Harman , Evening Standard, *Books of the Year*

This beautifully written memoir of family mystery proved one of the surprise hits of 2019

—— James Marriot , The Times, *Books of the Year*

[A] twisting literary mystery that also serves as a deeply moving love letter

—— Claire Allfree , Metro, *Books of the Year*

A complex story of family secrets, beautifully written, and illustrated

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday, *Books of the Year*

A beautiful, multi-layered story full of lost love, human motivation and tender secrets

—— SheerLuxe

[A] bewitching blend of history and mystery

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily Mirror

A scrupulous work of storytelling, radiant with empathy and filial affection

—— Hephzibah Anderson , Observer
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