Neither Nowt Nor Summat: In Search of the meaning of Yorkshire [Paperback]

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  • Category: Books (Travel)
  • Author:  Mcmillan, Ian
  • Author:  Mcmillan, Ian
  • ISBN-10:  0091959969
  • ISBN-10:  0091959969
  • ISBN-13:  9780091959968
  • ISBN-13:  9780091959968
  • Publisher:  Ebury Press
  • Publisher:  Ebury Press
  • Pages:  320
  • Pages:  320
  • Binding:  Paperback
  • Binding:  Paperback
  • Pub Date:  01-May-2016
  • Pub Date:  01-May-2016
  • SKU:  0091959969-11-SPLV
  • SKU:  0091959969-11-SPLV
  • Item ID: 100516770
  • List Price: $17.95
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I’m going to define the essence of this sprawling place as best I can. I’m going to start here, in this village, and radiate out like a ripple in a pond. I don’t want to go to the obvious places, either; I want to be like a bus driver on my first morning on the job, getting gloriously lost, turning up where I shouldn’t. I’m going to confirm or deny the clichés, holding them up to see where the light gets in. Yorkshire people are tight. Yorkshire people are arrogant. Yorkshire people eat a Yorkshire pudding before every meal. Yorkshire people solder a t’ before every word they use...

If there were such a thing as a professional Yorkshireman, Ian McMillan would be it. He’s regularly consulted as a home-grown expert, and southerners comment archly on his ‘fruity Yorkshire brogue’. But he has been keeping a secret. His dad was from Lanarkshire, Scotland, making him, as he puts it, only ‘half tyke’. So Ian is worried; is he Yorkshire enough?

To try to understand what this means Ian embarks on a journey around the county, starting in the village has lived in his entire life. With contributions from the Cudworth Probus Club, a kazoo playing train guard, Mad Geoff the barber and four Saddleworth council workers looking for a mattress, Ian tries to discover what lies at the heart of Britain’s most distinct county and its people, as well as finding out whether the Yorkshire Pudding is worthy of becoming a UNESCO Intangible Heritage Site, if Harrogate is really,really, in Yorkshire and, of course, who knocks up the knocker up?

IAN McMILLAN was born in 1956 in Darfield, a village near Barnsley, where he still lives. He always wanted to be a writer but all the books he got out of the library were written by people who lived in Surrey, not the Yorkshire Coalfield. He attended North Staffordshire Polytechnic, was a drummer in Barnsley's first folk-rock band and worked in al#K

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