I've started Colin MacInnes' The London Novels, an omnibus of the three books he wrote in the late 50s - City of Spades, Absolute Beginners and Mr Love and Justice. I think many of my friends here know I'm partial to a bit of London low life.
This one's been bugging me for some time. I bought it in Blackwells in London on a rainy Monday afternoon in October five years ago, to cheer myself up - I'd just been made redundant - and it's been staring at me from the bookshelf ever since! To quote the blurb:
... this exciting omnibus explores a very different side of London life in the 1950s than is usually portrayed. His characters are colourful and real, painting vivid pictures of areas such as Brixton and Notting Hill at this time. The stories of friendship, love and life dance on a background of jazz and good times, as London's staid reputation progresses to that of a thriving multiracial capital. A man ahead of his time, MacInnes displayed the realities of 1950s London: an emerging teen culture, black immigration and the glamourisation of crime and criminals with remarkable insight and sympathy.
Not sure London's reputation was ever "staid", but still ...