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1996: My Backstage Pass to the Wildest Year of Britains Wildest Decade [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 320 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 240x159x30 mm, kaal: 540 g, 20 col plates (8pp)
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: HarperCollins
  • ISBN-10: 0008767130
  • ISBN-13: 9780008767136
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 320 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 240x159x30 mm, kaal: 540 g, 20 col plates (8pp)
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: HarperCollins
  • ISBN-10: 0008767130
  • ISBN-13: 9780008767136
Dominic clearly remembers more about the 90s than I do. Zoe Ball

I was in the right place at exactly the right time.







I was handed a precious backstage pass to this magical period, as a chronicler of some of its most significant moments, of its wild protagonists, whether in music, entertainment, fashion, football, art or politics.







I had a front-row seat for that insane decade, but it was 1996 that was the periods stunning apex. Oasis at Maine Road and Knebworth, the births of Robbie Williams the solo star and the Spice Girls, the Euro 96 football tournament and Three Lions, the rise of New Labour and Tony Blair.







I was there for the lot.







1996. Britpop ruled the airwaves.







The tabloids framed reality long before Instagram.Football was finally coming home. Tony Blair was learning to play rock star and rock stars were learning they could play politics. Everyone was partying hard, and Britain was the coolest place on earth.





Showbiz reporter Dominic Mohan wasnt watching the party from afar he was in the room.



Backstage at Knebworth with Oasis. In strip clubs with Robbie Williams. On the phone to Bowie. On the receiving end of Spice Girls gossip, Gallagher gobbiness and tabloid-era chaos. From Euro 96 euphoria to Brit Awards anarchy, from rave culture to New Labour, Mohan witnessed the moment the UK went from scruffy indie island to global cultural powerhouse.



Part memoir, part cultural autopsy and part riotous tour through the 90s and its greatest year, 1996 is a jaw-dropping front-row seat to the madness, the music, the football, and the politics that reshaped Britain and created legends along the way.



Three decades on, Mohan returns to the year everything peaked, and asks: what the hell happened, why did it matter, and can it ever happen again?





If you were there this book will feel like going home.







If you werent youll wish you had been.

Arvustused

"Nobody writes about the Nineties better than Dominic Mohan he is the baggy-trousered poet laureate of that mad-for-it, up-for-it and frequently out-of-it decade when Britain swung once more. Here is that music-mad, sun-drenched and curiously innocent country in all its swaggering glory a glorious celebration of a younger, better and happier time. Tony Parsons





Dom was everywhere in the 90s and there is nobody better placed to stitch those historic moments together and document them in a brilliant belter of a book like this. Paul Oakenfold





Dominic clearly remembers more about the 90s than I do. Zoe Ball







This book is redolent of a time when the country had a deeper shared experience culturally and, politically, while some of it was completely time-bound there are elements which are timeless lessons about how countries do well. Tony Blair







Britpoptastic! Alex James

Muu info

My Backstage Pass to the Wildest Year of Britains Wildest Decade a must-read for 2026
Dominic Mohan is an award-winning journalist, broadcaster and former editor of The Sun newspaper.



While working as The Suns showbusiness editor, he interviewed some of the biggest names in entertainment including Sir Paul McCartney, David Bowie, U2, Beyonce, Madonna, Sir Rod Stewart, Sir Elton John, Oasis, Coldplay and The Spice Girls.



In 2005 he was presented with the Hugh Cudlipp award, recognising excellence in popular journalism at the British Press Awards for his campaign to re-record Band Aids Do They Know Its Christmas? working closely with Sir Bob Geldof. This led to the Live 8 concert the following year, raising tens of millions of pounds to aid African famine victims.



With over three decades of experience in print, broadcast and digital media, he now consults in communications, crisis management and public relations, alongside his continuing love affair with journalism and broadcasting.



A father-of-four, he lives in North London with his wife Michelle.