Heatwave
With scorching temperatures soaring to 35 degrees, severe water shortages and a sunburned population queuing at the street standpipes, the summer of 1976 will always be remembered as Britain’s hottest on record.
But the wave that hit the UK that year was also cultural and political, with upheaval on the streets, in parliament, on the cricket pitch and on the radios and TV sets of a nation at a crossroads.
Before this blistering summer, Britain seemed stuck in the post-war era, a country where people were all in it together – as long as you were white, male and straight. In July, Tom Robinson writes a song called Glad to be Gay, and by August bank holiday, Black youth are making the police run for their lives in the almighty riot at the Notting Hill Carnival. But with the Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson suddenly quitting, the pound sinking and the economy tanking, a restless immigrant population and increasing dissatisfaction in the old world order, the weather seemed to boil up the country to the point where the lid blows off.
Weaving a rich tapestry of the news stories of the year, with social commentary and dozens of first-person interviews with those that were there at the time, Williams’s reappraisal of the summer of ’76 is an evocative, sometimes nostalgic but always an unflinching read. HEATWAVE takes us back to relive the events of that summer and asks – have we really moved on as much as we would have liked?
Reviews
In this engrossing account of one utterly memorable summer, John L Williams goes way beyond nostalgia, as through a series of powerful stories - sometimes touching but often disturbing - he argues persuasively that these were the months that Britain started decisively to become the more open and fluid society we know today.
Scorching, seething and scintillating, HEATWAVE conjures a slow-burning collage of a country on the brink. I lived through those cruel months, and Williams recreates them with intense skill.
In HEATWAVE, John L. Williams grippingly captures three months that shook Britain’s cultural landscape. His use of highly entertaining and often devastating stories about the febrile atmosphere of 1976’s extraordinarily hot summer show how simmering community unrest, in a newly multicultural Britain, soon reached boiling point.
Thanks to a blend of forensic research and an eye for the most delicious details, John L Williams’ deeply evocative dissection of this mythical moment in our collective memory is an absolute joy. Like the fumes of newspapers gently baking in the midday heat, I just wanted to keep inhaling it.
If you like your nostalgia sugar-coated and rose-tinted, HEATWAVE isn't for you. Instead it offers as exhilarating and empowering a kick in the teeth as the times it describes, that epochal fault line in British cultural life between kaftans, Fred Perry shirts and bondage trousers.
Superb…Scorching, animated and essential reading
Superbly researched... full of wry, ironic observations
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