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Long Lost: The Story of the Newspaper Column That Started the Reunion Industry [Paperback]

Monica Porter
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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Book Description

18 Sep 2010
Monica Porter's weekly Missing and Found column has been running in the Daily Mail since June 1999, featuring the tales of people who are searching for their long lost friends and family members. Schoolmates and childhood pals, wartime comrades and evacuees, birth parents and estranged siblings, former colleagues, old flames, fellow members of Swinging Sixties pop groups and of scout troops. All of life is there - the light-hearted and the poignant, and often the strikingly evocative. Over the years the column has reunited many hundreds of people. And it was ahead of its time, a forerunner to ventures such as the Friends Reunited website (launched in 2000). Today there are many internet sites, as well as print outlets, which aim to bring the 'long lost' back together. But Missing and Found has a quality which makes it especially appealing to its readers: many of its stories tap into our national social and cultural memory, they are concerned not only with the individuals named in them, but with our common past. This, perhaps, is the underlying reason for its popularity. As well as reprising a selection of the column's most colourful reunion tales, Long Lost tells the story behind the groundbreaking newspaper column - how it was inspired by the experience of an ordinary couple from the provinces, Gill and John Whitley, who traced John's mother after 34 years. The emotional reunion changed their lives and led them to set up a voluntary service helping others achieve the same. They became the column's behind-the-scenes 'people finders'. In Long Lost Gill Whitley tells the author how her tracing methods have evolved, with electronic databases and online resources largely replacing old-fashioned 'detective work'. She provides an easy guide on how to find a person yourself, as well as valuable advice on when it is wiser not to search for someone. Missing and Found stemmed from an idea proposed by no less than Sir David English himself, while Editor-in-Chief of Associated Newspapers. Which makes the column - and now this book - one of the illustrious Fleet Street editor's enduring legacies.

Product details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Quartet Books (18 Sep 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0704372010
  • ISBN-13: 978-0704372016
  • Product Dimensions: 13.9 x 21.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 852,535 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

About the Author

Monica Porter has been a London-based journalist since the 1970s and her work has appeared in most quality Fleet Street newspapers, as well as numerous magazines. Long Lost is her fourth book. www.monicaporter.co.uk

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Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5 stars
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars We all love a reunion... 9 Nov 2010
Format:Paperback
Monica Porter has written a wonderfully readable book that is full of heartwarming tales of reunion. We learn all about how her `Missing and Found' column started in the Daily Mail; of the husband and wife team who helped to track down many of the long-lost and the ordinary people whose lives were brightened beyond all hope when someone who they had long lost touched with, re-entered their lives.

Monica weaves in her own distinctive commentary, steering us through the ups and downs of the decision to embark on the search for the lost; for the people who once touched our lives. As someone who has never read her columns, I found the book to be inspiring. It is impossible not to be moved by each story of reunion. Not all reunion stories have happy endings and Monica cautions us to be prepared for the unexpected but she does so with warmth and humour, even sharing her own personal story of rediscovering a friend who she had gone to school with many years ago. I loved the stories and there's a part of me that can't stop thinking about the friends who I'm no longer in touch with. Maybe, just maybe, I'll use the DIY tips to tracing people that Monica helpfully shares with us to help me find my long lost.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Sincerely hope you do read your reviews Monica and please forgive my informality! I suspect this is because your writing style conveys you as a friendly, sociable, professionaly gifted person who cares about others and is in a position to use her talents and natural ability to bring pleasure in to their lives. Everyone is entitled to their personal opinion on any subject, that I would not dispute. However, I wish to place on record that if Tony 'X' has nothing better to do than make adverse comment on your book, ignore this cathode, I include myself, firmly, amongst the anodes which, I am positive, will continue to increase in number as your many, appreciative readers concur, register and make their 'votes' count towards the undoubted 'majority verdict'.

Would not expect you to remember but 'a few years back', you unwittingly reunited two sea pals from what is now, in 2011, half a century ago. Tony - NO! Not that Tony! - was my superior officer on the cargo passenger ship 'EBOE'. He was looking to trace the best man at his wedding so that he could attend the imminent, golden celebration. Sadly he, the best man, was no longer with us but - on a happier note - I saw the wedding day picture of Tony and Norma in your column, contacted you and the rest, as they say, is history. A little footnote to that story. Coincidentally you make mention of our, sadly now defunct, shipping company, on Page 33 of your book, I very much appreciated your 'Once mighty' comment! Tony, Norma was also with him, gave me a watch off, in 1961, so that I could have a drink on my 21st birthday, at sea, off the West African coast. Tony and Norma were also at my 'surprise' 70th birthday party, last year. How often can that happen without 'helpful' people 'assisting' and thereby enabling such an occurence?
... Read more ›
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining and highly readable 30 Dec 2010
Format:Paperback
I got this for my mum because she's been a fan of the 'Missing and Found' column for a number of years. She liked it a lot and said that I ought to read it too, so I did. And even though I'm only 27, and so perhaps not the age-group that it's aimed at, I found it surprisingly interesting and really informative about our cultural past and the memories that keep it together.
I definitely recommend this to anyone, of whatever generation.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Paul W
Format:Paperback
Did you know that Monica Porter was reuniting people before Friends Reunited existed? This book introduces us to the Daily Mail column that has been running for over a decade and reconnected people from all walks of life. It's a wonderful trip down memory lane with some of the stories that have appeared in the column over many years. These are evocative of periods in our history - such the 'swinging '60s', WW11, the Falklands War and so on. Not only are the stories little slices of history in themselves, the book also includes a really helpful 3-page guide on how to find someone yourself. Also gives a good picture of how and why today's huge reunion 'industry' came about. Recommended.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Reunion Industry Revolution 24 Dec 2010
By CJL
Format:Paperback
The woman who, after seventy years, wanted to be reunited with the policeman who arrested her for her role in the 1936 anti-fascist demonstrations in London; the member of the Women's Land Army who had been searching for the `Land Girls' with whom she had served side-by-side in the Second World War; the more than sixty relatives and loved ones who wrote in with their memories of the thirty-four schoolboys, two teachers, and three air-crew who died in the tragic Stavanger air crash of 1961: every page of Monica Porter's Long Lost captures the imagination with the many poignant and inspiring human stories which made up her Daily Mail column `Missing and Found'. This is also an important historical document and should be read by anyone who has any interest in the ever-expanding online reunion and social networking industries. When the first `Missing and Found' column was issued, on Saturday 26th June 1999, it preceded Friends Reunited by a full year. Later websites, such as Classmates Reunited, Genes Reunited and UK People Finder soon followed. In England, therefore, Porter's column stood at the heart of what would become a cultural revolution. With the increasing dominance of social networking sites like FaceBook in our lives today a book like Long Lost carries an extra weight of cultural significance because of what it can tell us about the earliest phases of the online explosion which succeeded the very first instalments of `Missing and Found'. It also serves to remind us that the many hope-instilling stories of separation and re-discovery, or the deeply moving accounts of the `still missing', are part of a collective memory which traverses social, national, and temporal boundaries.... Read more ›
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars long lost
I am a great fan of the daily mail column of long lost so to be able to get a book was an excellent idea,I do hope at a later date there will be a follow up but to read up on lost... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Mrs. Amanda R. Newman
5.0 out of 5 stars Missing and Found discovered 'Long Lost' stories for 'The Lanfranc...
5.0 out of 5 stars Missing and Found discovered 'Long Lost' stories for 'The Lanfranc Boys', March 9, 2011
By
R. F. B. Read more
Published on 13 Mar 2011 by R. F. B. Jones
2.0 out of 5 stars A disapointing read
Not quite what it was promoted as, this almost seems to be a book written for the sake of it - or one by someone who is reaching the end of their career and wanted to pull together... Read more
Published on 23 Dec 2010 by tony
5.0 out of 5 stars 75 real-life stories to make you smile.
A delightful collection of real-life vignettes: friends grown apart and re-united (and a few as yet not re-united) complete with photos. Read more
Published on 30 Nov 2010 by Vivien Geddes
5.0 out of 5 stars Tea, Muffins and This
What a delightful book.

It isn't only family members, childhood friends and classmates reunited but servicemen, work colleages and musicians from former dance bands,... Read more
Published on 20 Oct 2010 by S. Rose
5.0 out of 5 stars NOT ONLY NOSTALGIA BUT ALSO ......
If you are a Daily Mail reader you will probably know what to expect from Monica Porter's latest book. Read more
Published on 18 Oct 2010 by brigitte
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