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Diamonds In The Mud

English

By (author): Brian Reade

'Powerful, vital and visionary' - Jimmy McGovern SOMETHING unusual happened in Britain during the spring of 2020. As the nation went into lockdown to fight a killer pandemic our view of what constituted a hero changed. Suddenly celebrity businessmen, actors, sports stars, singers, even royals seemed irrelevant. The people we were truly in awe of were the low-paid lifesavers, so much so that we stood outside our homes every Thursday to applaud them. As spring turned to summer and the Black Lives Matter movement gathered momentum, action was taken against those from past generations who had been feted, such as Bristol slave trader Edward Colston whose statue was hauled down. It felt as though the country was re-evaluating the notion of heroism. But how did we arrive at such a skewed version of it? 'Diamonds in the Mud' asks why the British have traditionally been taught to venerate kings and queens, generals and Eton-educated Prime Ministers, while, a few notable exceptions aside, those who changed history from below rarely got a look-in. It does so by telling the stories of a selection of working-class heroes the award-winning writer has met through life and journalism. Men and women who rose from humble backgrounds to change the world. Some in a huge way, others in a smaller way, but all made the people they came from immensely proud. From relentless matriarchs like Doreen Lawrence and the Hillsborough mothers to Omagh bomb victim Donna Marie McGillion whose stoicism told the men of terror they wouldn't win; from football men like Bill Shankly and Bob Paisley who brought their people joy to the Fans Supporting Foodbanks group and Marcus Rashford who fed the poor; from class warriors like Dennis Skinner to glass-ceiling breakers like Barbara Castle; from trade union leader Jack Jones who fought fascists in Spain to Muhammad Ali who inspired a generation of British black people to stand tall; from sacked dockers who opened a social justice hub for all-comers to NHS nurses who lost their lives on the Covid frontline as they battled to save others. The book argues that these are the type of heroes we should be teaching future generations about. That, perhaps, if children in state schools were taught about the achievements of those from the same class as them they would have a fraction of the confidence enjoyed by public school pupils and realise that they too have the capability to change the world. And maybe Britain would become less of a cap-doffing nation that teaches ordinary people the main thing they need to know is their place. See more
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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 153 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Aug 2021
  • Publisher: Mirror Books
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781913406639

About Brian Reade

Brian Reade is an award-winning journalist and author who has two weekly opinion columns on politics and sport in the Daily Mirror. He was born in Liverpool and began his career on the Reading Post in 1980 became a columnist on the Liverpool Echo in 1990 and joined the Daily Mirror in 1994. The British Press Awards have named Reade Columnist Sports Columnist and Feature Writer of the Year and handed him the Cudlipp Award for Journalistic Excellence for his decades long battle for justice for the Hillsborough families. He has written two successful books 43 Years With The Same Bird about his life following Liverpool FC and Epic Swindle an account of LFC's doomed American takeover which made the Sunday Times bestseller list. He has had his own radio show on the North West's Radio City station and written and narrated a documentary about trade union leader Jack Jones called Unsung Hero.

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