This is London

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What to expect

Longlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize 2016, formerly known as the Samuel Johnson Prize.

This is the new London: an immigrant city. Over one-third of Londoners were born abroad, with half arriving since the millennium. This has utterly transformed the capital, for better and for worse.

Ben Judah is an acclaimed foreign correspondent, but here he turns his reporter's gaze on home, immersing himself in the hidden world of London's immigrants to reveal the city in the eyes of its beggars, bankers, coppers, gangsters, carers and witch-doctors. From the backrooms of its mosques, Tube tunnels and nightclubs to the frontlines of its streets, Judah has supped with oligarchs and spent nights sleeping rough, worked on building sites and talked business with prostitutes; he's heard stories of heartbreaking failure, but also witnessed extraordinary acts of compassion.

This is London explodes fossilized myths and offers a fresh, exciting portrait of what it's like to live, work, fall in love, raise children, grow old and die in London now. Simultaneously intimate and epic, here is a compulsive and deeply sympathetic book on this dizzying world city from one of our brightest new writers.

Critics 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

    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

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