Party Animals, 9780099478973
Paperback
A Communist childhood revealed: family, secrets, and lost ideals.

Party Animals

my family and other communists

$33.03

  • Paperback

    320 pages

  • Release Date

    14 February 2017

Check Delivery Options

Summary

Party Animals: Growing Up Red in Communist Britain

A revelatory memoir by one of Britain’s best-known journalists.

SHORTLISTED FOR THE SLIGHTLY FOXED BEST FIRST BIOGRAPHY AWARD

David Aaronovitch grew up in Communist Great Britain - a Britain hidden from view for most, but for those on the inside it was a life filled with picket lines, militant trade unions, solidarity rallies for foreign Communists, the Red Army Choir, copies of the Daily Worker, all underpinned by a…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780099478973
ISBN-10:0099478978
Author:David Aaronovitch
Publisher:Vintage Publishing
Imprint:Vintage
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:320
Release Date:14 February 2017
Weight:223g
Dimensions:198mm x 129mm x 19mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

An affectionate and insightful account of 20th-century history that also amounts to a manifesto for the power of words - and belonging.

An affectionate and insightful account of 20th-century history that also amounts to a manifesto for the power of words – and belonging. – Helen Davies * Sunday Times, Book of the Year *Compassionate and wise… An effervescent and essential writer. – Nick Cohen * Observer *David Aaronovitch is to be congratulated on his Le Carre like sleuthing into the deceits and self-delusions of his parents and their communist friends. He has produced a wise, funny and sometimes heart-breaking account of how otherwise good and nice people are capable of believing a load of total and utter b*ll*cks about the world, the class system and themselves. It is an invocation of a vanished tribe that is still relevant, alas, to the Britain of Jeremy Corbyn, Ken Livingstone and Owen Jones, I loved it. – Boris JohnsonParty Animals is an utterly engaging and truly humane story about fitting in, opting out, and finding meaning. Unflinchingly honest, it is by turns harrowing and hilarious. Not since Clive James’s Falling Towards England has there been a memoir so clearly destined to become a classic in its own time. – Amanda ForemanDavid Aaronovitch has written a compelling account of the Communist mindset in post-war Britain: a superb mix of social history, Marxist philosophy and often painful family biography. It is a hugely revelatory insight into a lost world and its modern legacies. – Tristram HuntA raw…extraordinary new memoir-cum-social history… Vivid and moving. – Rachel Cooke * Observer *The extraordinarily gripping final section… elevates his book above similar memoirs by other children of party members… Tremendously frank, often moving. – Dominic Sandbrook * Sunday Times *A colourful, sentimental, damning and funny part-history, part-autobiography. That is, until an extraordinarily brutal final chapter… [that] reveals Party Animals to be more than just a revealing memoir, but, hopefully, Mr Aaronovitch’s catharsis. – Mark Leftly * Independent on Sunday *Deeply personal… A clever and moving portrait of a strange, unexplored subculture, of dedicated self-education by desperately poor young men, of undoubtedly good causes adopted for the advancement of a wicked and dangerous purpose. – Peter Hitchens * Mail on Sunday *A rich and forensic examination, all the more uncomfortable for its honesty and the authoritative knowledge of Left-wing politics that Aaronovitch brings to it … Like Lorna Sage’s Bad Blood, this is a riveting autobiography that forces you to think about your own family history. * Evening Standard *

About The Author

David Aaronovitch

David Aaronovitch is an award-winning journalist, who has worked in radio, television and newspapers in the United Kingdom since the early 1980s. He lives in Hampstead, north London, with his wife, three daughters and Kerry Blue the terrier. His first book, Paddling to Jerusalem, won the Madoc prize for travel literature in 2001 and his second, Voodoo Histories, was a Sunday Times top ten bestseller.

Returns

This item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.