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This is London: Life and Death in the World City Paperback – 28 Jan 2016

4.2 out of 5 stars 98 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Picador; Air Iri OME edition (28 Jan. 2016)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1447274792
  • ISBN-13: 978-1447274797
  • Product Dimensions: 15.3 x 3.1 x 23.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (98 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 301,174 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

It is hard to overstate the value of what Judah has done ... This is London is an important and impressive book Sunday Telegraph An eye-opening investigation into the hidden immigrant life of the city ... You won't read a more succinct analysis Sunday Times A revelatory work, full of nuggets of unexpected information about the lives of others ... [Judah] is a fine, intrepid reporter Financial Times Work of this sort really is necessary; this is the stuff we must think about it we are ever to get to grips (assuming it's not too late already) with what lies ahead for our cities. Every MP should be given a copy immediately. On every page lies and uncomfortable truth, in every paragraph sheer horror. It is a book that demonstrably improves the eyesight. Read it, and the streets will look different: I guarantee it. Above all, more than I can possibly say, I admired its author's pluck, determination, compassion and refusal to judge - and I'd like him to know that some of the stories he told will haunt me for a long time to come -- Rachel Cooke New Statesman Judah has succeeded in opening reader's eyes to the hardships experienced by many and ignored by most Independent This truly extraordinary book is as raw, powerful, unflinching, witty, engaging, shocking, in-your-face and occasionally both heartwarming and heartbreaking as the great but complex and flawed city it chronicles. I've lived in London for three decades yet found something I didn't know about it on virtually every page -- Andrew Roberts, author of Napoleon the Great Having spent the last year meeting people along several of the world's busiest migration trails, it is fascinating to read Ben Judah's powerful account of where some of them end up. Judah has created an alternative and essential guide to London, and Londoners, in 2015.' -- Patrick Kingsley Guardian Mesmerising, trenchant and deeply compassionate -- Book of the Month Bookseller A vital, almost overwhelming panorama of brutality and injustice Metro Ben Judah offers no answers; but bears witness. He reports the stories of London's immigrants with a smart mind, a light touch and a brave and compassionate heart. These statements deserve to be heard. This is London is an important, state of the nation, eye-opening report from our increasingly ghettoized capital city -- Dan Boothby, author of Island of Dreams This Is London is an exhilarating account of the British capital ... His writing is visceral, and at its best echoes the immersive style of the great Polish reporter and author Ryszard Kapuscinski ... He treats his subjects with great sensitivity ... an important, unflinching piece of reportage. Judah digs deep into parts of London that a less adventurous journalist would avoid, unearthing some of the many tragic narratives shaping a city at the turbulent forefront of globalisation The National (Scotland) [Judah travels through the city, coaxing astonishing interviews from a wide range of migrants ... He captures the different voices with great skill ... His observations are acute ... His interviews are always psychologically telling ... Most remarkable is Judah's obvious compassion, to which his subjects respond, opening their hearts and letting their voices "tumble" into his tape recorder ... London emerges from this book as a disturbing, dramatically changing city ... It is an extraordinary portrait of a city and a rare treat to come across a book in which the ideas are as compelling and fresh as the writing. This is London is a game changer. No longer can we stroll past villages of sleeping Roma and pretend they do not exist. This is London today and Ben Judah is its chronicler Literary Review Amazing -- Peter Pomerantsev A chronicle of the capital so incisively up-to-date it is disconcerting, invigorating, and depressing all at once ... Judah allows the new Londoners to speak for themselves and, in so doing, shines a light on the dark corners of the city -- Lilian Pizzichini Mail on Sunday Judah is brilliant at winning the confidence of London's immigrant poor and encouraging them to talk ... In terms of getting under the skin of a small part of England, Judah has written the most impressive book since Nick Davies' Dark Heart ... Work like this is vital in reminding the middle classes that poverty - the filthy and beggarly poverty of soul-destroying drudgery and an empty stomach - is more than a set of figures in the negative column of the UK PLC balance sheet. It is an ineradicable feature of the economic system on which much of the middle classes' own prosperity depends Little Atoms Compassionate, fresh and courageous Spectator Judah grabs hold of London and shakes out its secrets. He has a gift for ingratiating himself into very foreign surroundings and teasing out stories...Judah has done an important service in capturing the voices of those swept to the margins by economic forces beyond their control Economist A wonderfully-written, fascinating account of modern-day life, offering a glimpse of the world from those arriving in the city hoping for a better life...an important, detailed read on the stories of those often unheard -- Simon Peach Press Association Astonishing...Judah has travelled the length and breadth of the city, talking to and empathising with those too often airbrushed from the picture...As a former foreign correspondent, Judah is the ideal guide to this new landscape...important and impressive Sunday Telegraph [A] remarkable study of the modern city ... A timely insight into how we live now i

Book Description

A major work of narrative non-fiction from a fresh new voice. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
This is a thought provoking and in some ways upsetting book but compulsive reading all the same. Ben Judah went looking for the stories of recent immigrants and has written about what he saw and heard. Depressing as it is, he hasn't told us anything we didn't really, really, already know. We know what sort of life the Romanian beggars are living, we know about the Polish builders 4 to a room, about the Kosovan gangsters that everyone is terrified of, the black drug dealers and the eastern European prostitutes. It's been in front of our eyes for years and in the media, despite the best efforts of the BBC and others to apply the PC filter. As central London has become some kind of world city theme park for the rich the underclass that supports it has been pushed out to the degraded suburbs, out of sight and out of mind. These various "communities" are in fact segregated cliques and the only thing they have in common appears to be a festering mutual hatred.

Nobody comes out of the situation with much credit especially the white British. Most of us looked the other way whilst indirectly benefiting from this exploitation, not even daring to risk causing PC offence by describing what is in front of our eyes. All the time knowing it is unsustainable and is destroying society cohesion and the indigenous culture.

This book is pessimistic in that it focuses on the underclass of poor and failed countries who have come to London seeking their fortune. There are no French nuclear engineers, German bankers or American academics. The white British are underclass scumbags who haven't got the money or the where with all to jump to higher ground, as opposed to our brightest and best having the time of their lives (before they have to move out for the sake of their kids).
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Ben Judah reports on London we know very little about, but which now accounts for 55% of the capital – the city of immigrants: recent and not, naturalized and illegal, professional and unskilled, hopeful and desperate. In order to study the inner mechanics of this new social formation Ben had to live in a doss house and tout for work with migrant workers, spend nights with city cleaners and Ilford Lane ladies, even sleep rough with the Roma people. From all these experiences comes a raw and striking autopsy of the new London which offers no solutions, sometimes compassion but always truthfulness and eyewitness accuracy. Must-read for everyone especially those Londoners who do not venture beyond TfL zone 1.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
An immediate portrayal of London life, using real individuals' stories to create a collage.

This is a terrific, enjoyable and engrossing book. The criticisms below should not stop anyone from reading this book.

The greatest strength of this book is the human-ness of his characters. They come across as warm, flawed, rounded people. The author deserves credit for getting close to so many different people and for using their words as part of a grand tapestry. The author makes his characters sympathetic without being sentimental. The author's own descriptions beautifully and naturally fit the tone and lexicon of his subject. I felt like I knew the people in this book, and I cared about them.

To a Londoner, this book is not quite the revelation that some reviewers (and possibly the author) suggest it is. The author over sells the 'grizzly reality' angle- some of the streets he writes about don't match my perception of them. Frankly, for all the talk of the hardships of London, there are much harder and more violent cities than this one to live in. If London was the brutal and disconnected dystopia the author portrays, then people wouldn't flock here in their thousand from all over the world.

Perhaps one of the most interesting angles of this book is the absence of 'indigenous' voices. The characters' views on the British residents is also interesting.
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Format: Hardcover
Some interesting insights, but (as a few other people have commented) there's shameful bias here. If your aim is to show the stark reality of a situation, then the author's speculations have no place... and they're here in spades.

My favourite bit (so far...) is on page 153 of the hardback edition, where Judah is talking about some time he spent in a house of Romanian immigrants. With regard to the bragging of one young Romanian man, Judah writes: "Sliceface roars throaty laughter. But I can tell from the way he grins that Baby is a virgin."

HOW, BEN..?!! Because you have supernatural virgin-detecting powers..? Because you have the third eye..? Because you can read minds (or genitals)..? Sadly, this kind of guff appears throughout 'This is London', wholly undermining any claim the author might make for objectivity... which is a shame, since in some respects it's an important book bearing some timely insights.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
This book first piqued my interest when I picked it up in a local bookshop and read the opening few paragraphs, which describe the plight of a family of immigrants living illegally outside Victoria Coach Station. The thing that really hit home was that I knew who these people were - I walked past them every day on my way to work and always wondered what their story was - and now here, in front of me were the answers. I devoured the first few chapters and found myself walking around the streets of London far more aware of the accents and behaviours of many of the nationalities and people described in the book. This is in no way to suggest that this is just a collection of stereotypes - but it's telling that many of us tend not to notice these people as they struggle to make ends meet. And just because we don't "see" them, it doesn't mean they don't exist.

But back to the book. After finishing around half of it, I started to wonder where Ben Judah was taking us. We'd had multiple similes and metaphors describing everything from the weather to the pavement and many tales of poverty and woe. This book is basically a catalogue of misery with very few moments of relief, light or otherwise. I found myself getting a little tired of the continual grind, with many of the subjects in the book having very similar stories and despite coming from different backgrounds and cultures, the end result was always the same. Broken dreams. Poverty. Disappointment. Rejection. And everything in between.

By the final chapter I was relieved it was coming to an end. I'd really hoped that the author would build on the excellent life stories from the first half of the book to take us into something with a little more focus and a definitive beginning, middle and end - but he didn't.
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