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Pedro and Ricky Come Again: Selected Writing 1988-2020
Hardback
Main Details
Title |
Pedro and Ricky Come Again: Selected Writing 1988-2020
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Jonathan Meades
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Physical Properties |
Format:Hardback | Pages:992 | Dimensions(mm): Height 240,Width 159 |
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Category/Genre | Individual artists and art monographs Architecture Literary essays |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781783529506
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Classifications | Dewey:828.9209 |
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Audience | |
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Unbound
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Imprint |
Unbound
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NZ Release Date |
20 November 2022 |
Publication Country |
United Kingdom
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Description
Jonathan Meades is the widely acclaimed author of Pompey, Museum Without Walls (20k copies) and An Encyclopaedia of Myself - described as 'a masterpiece' by the Financial Times, and shortlisted for the 2014 Samuel Johnson Prize - among many others. His numerous films for the BBC are legendary, covering a vast range of subjects from jargon to the architecture of Fascism. This book assembles the best of Meades's as yet uncollected writing from the past thirty years. For fans of A. A. Gill (The Best Of, Lines in the Sand), Owen Hatherley (Trans-Europe Express, A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain), Christopher Hitchins (Arguably) and Martin Amis (The War Against Cliche, The Rub of Time).
Author Biography
Jonathan Meades is a writer, journalist, essayist and film-maker. His books include three works of fiction - Filthy English, Pompey and The Fowler Family Business - and several collections including Museum Without Walls, which received thirteen nominations as a book of the year in 2012. An Encyclopaedia of Myself was shortlisted for the PEN Ackerley Prize and longlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize in 2014. His first and only cookbook, The Plagiarist in the Kitchen, was published in 2017. Meades has written and performed in more than sixty highly acclaimed television films on predominantly topographical subjects such as shacks, garden cities, megastructures, buildings associated with vertigo, beer, pigs, and the architecture of Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini and Franco. He also creates artknacks and treyfs. Treyf means impure, not kosher: it sums up his approach to all writing, film and art.
Reviews'Ought to become a classic. It is an enshrinement of [Meades's] intense baroque and catholic cleverness' Roger Lewis, The Times 'One of the foremost prose stylists of his age in any register . . . Probably we don't deserve Meades, a man who apparently has never composed a dull paragraph' Steven Poole, Guardian 'There are more gems in this wonderful book than I could cram into a dozen of these columns' Simon Heffer, Daily Telegraph 'As Meades puts it, who wants friendliness from books or from buildings? . . . Meades has sought to make a book shaped like his beloved Blenheim Palace: brutalist, arrogant; a moving finger' Frances Wilson, TLS 'Such a useful and important critic . . . There is not a sentence here that is not armoured with intelligence, and very few, if any, that are not, in their way, a delight to read' Nicholas Lezard, Spectator 'Meades has the panache and fearlessness to pull it all off' Literary Review 'The consistency in quality and style are remarkable . . . It's writing that has a pop; essaying that puts its pint glass down with a slam, then offers you another. Positively curt and classy' Irish Times 'This vast compendium has something to inform, amuse, shock or repulse on nearly every page' Paul Finch, Architects' Journal 'Gargantuan and whip-smart . . . Meades emerges as a fiercely independent thinker and a formidable intellect. His acerbic style carries the day, and readers bored of dry criticism will relish these piquant ripostes' Publishers Weekly
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