Forget the Anorak: What Trainspotting Was Really Like

by Michael G. Harvey

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Book cover for Forget the Anorak

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Michael Harvey's book brings to its readers the excitement of trainspotting in the 1950s and '60s, the hobby's heyday. It was the advent of the famous Ian Allan ABC Locospotters books that really gave the hobby its impetus, as they gave trainspotters all the information they required. Forget the Anorak sets out to provide the reader with a personal account of what the hobby entailed - teenagers roaming the railways of Britain, sleeping on deserted platforms on porters' trolleys, 'bunking' dimly lit depots and eluding capture, travelling hundreds of miles on a platform ticket, and stink bombs on the Underground. You'll be able to smell the steam, soot and unwashed socks, and taste the boiled egg sandwiches, the chips wrapped in newspaper and the hot jam doughnuts, all washed down with warm Tizer. Illustrated with Michael Harvey's own photographs and a selection of maps, Forget the Anorak appeals to anyone who experienced the golden days of trainspotting, as well as to anyone interested in the social history of Britain after the Second World War.
  • ISBN10 0752475622
  • ISBN13 9780752475622
  • Publish Date 8 November 2011 (first published 30 March 2004)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint The History Press Ltd
  • Format eBook
  • Pages 176
  • Language English