Deep Into the Sixties

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1960s
1960s Britain postwar
A01=David Kynaston
Author_David Kynaston
beatles
British politics
British social history
Category=NHTB
cultural shift
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
Harold Wilson
Labour government
mod culture
sixties nostalgia
social change
swinging london
Swinging Sixties
teenager
twentieth century Britain

Product details

  • ISBN 9781526657640
  • Dimensions: 153 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The sixth book in the celebrated ‘Tales of a New Jerusalem’ series – named one of the best books of the 21st century by the Sunday Times

'The most entertaining historian alive'
SPECTATOR
'Addictively readable' DOMINIC SANDBROOK
'The poet of postwar Britain . . . In a league of his own' JONATHAN COE
‘My goodness, [the series] rockets along: every page contains something surprising, something funny, something sad' CRAIG BROWN, SUNDAY TIMES

A definitive portrait of Britain in the throes of the Swinging Sixties, the new instalment in David Kynaston’s legendary 'Tales of a New Jerusalem' series – named one of the best non-fiction works of the 21st century by the Sunday Times

It’s the heart of the Sixties in Britain – the Beatles and the Stones vie at the top of the charts, England win the World Cup, and optimism and patriotism percolate through the streets. But this is not the full story of mid-Sixties Britain. Disaffection on the political left increasingly focuses on the escalating Vietnam War; and the ambitious hopes of Harold Wilson’s Labour government start to founder on the precarious state of the pound.

This was a time of looking both backwards and forwards – sweeping reforms to secondary education, huge swathes of urban redevelopment, and the irresistible rise of a confident, free-spending youth culture. Yet everyday life for many, especially beyond the big cities, bore striking resemblance to decades earlier.

Covering the short but intense period from after Churchill’s death in early 1965 to England’s Wembley triumph in July 1966, David Kynaston uses a plethora of contemporary sources, including diaries of ordinary people, to paint a richly nuanced picture of unrivalled detail. Deep Into the Sixties continues to revolutionise how we see post-war Britain.

David Kynaston was born in Aldershot in 1951. His many books include King Labour (1976, a study of the Victorian working class), The City of London (1994–2001, a widely acclaimed four-volume history), and Arlott, Swanton and the Soul of English Cricket (2018, co-written with Stephen Fay). Since 2001 his main focus has been on 'Tales of a New Jerusalem', a multi-volume history of post-war Britain. He continues to support Aldershot Town, subject of his diary Shots in the Dark (2020).

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