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| Do Not Pass Go: From the Old Kent Road to Mayfair | 
enlarge | Author: Tim Moore Publisher: Vintage Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy Used: £0.01 You Save: £7.98 (100%)
New (27) from £2.74
Avg. Customer Rating: 43 reviews Sales Rank: 60553
Media: Paperback Edition: New edition Pages: 352 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.1 x 0.9
ISBN: 0099433869 Dewey Decimal Number: 910 EAN: 9780099433866 ASIN: 0099433869
Publication Date: October 2, 2003 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: Good Clean Condition. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back!
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Amazon.co.uk Review Do Not Pass Go is the fourth comedy travelogue from Tim Moore--previous books have, respectively, chronicled his experiences trekking across Iceland in the footsteps of the Victorian Lord Dufferin (Frost on My Moustache), recreating Coryate's Grand Tour in a Rolls Royce (Continental Drifter) and cycling the route of the Tour de France (French Revolutions). Here, Moore, abandoning his customary modus operandi of inept Englishman abroad, opts to explore his native city by, as his children put it, "going round the Monopoly board but, like, in real life." Monopoly was, at least officially, invented during the 1930s by Charles Darrow, an unemployed boiler salesman from Germantown, Pennsylvania. (Darrow went to his grave, Moore notes, "stubbornly refusing to recall any contact with The Landlord Game, patented in 1904."). The original, and subsequent American versions, featured the streets of Atlantic City. The English, London edition first appeared in 1936, the same year as television and, apparently, the phrase "body odour". Produced by Waddingtons, a firm of Leeds printers, the actual streets and stations were haphazardly chosen by Victor Watson, the managing director, and his secretary, Marjorie Phillips, after a weekend jolly in the capital. Armed with board, dice and a 1933 London directory, Moore soon finds himself beaten by a Brazilian transsexual at Kings Cross (where else?); searching for the "Ampersand of Death" on Oxford Street; discovering how Coventry Street made the grade; tracing the decline of proto-Starbucks Lyons in Piccadilly and, of course, eating jellied eels in the "poo brown" east end of Whitechapel. Moore places himself firmly in the centre of his yarn and, like Bill Bryson, displays a remarkable eye for the incongruous comic detail. Sometimes the quips and jokes come at expense of real interaction with those he meets, but the result is a hilarious paean to game and city, that will have you ferreting about in a cupboard to retrieve a long neglected set. (I know I did.) --Travis Elborough
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| Customer Reviews: Read 38 more reviews...
A romp around old London town November 3, 2008 Moore has a very easy style of writing that leads you effortlessly though the streets featured on the Monopoly board. You don't have to be a die-hard board games fan to appreciate the book - just an interest in the quirky facts that history throws up. Moore's love of the game shines through and it would have been nice to hear even more about his experiences of the game. The kind of book that makes you laugh out loud and say 'well, I never knew that' in equal measure.
Do not collect 200 October 26, 2008 I arrived at Kings Cross Station, my first time working in London, and took a taxi along Euston Road and Pentonville Road to my temporary digs near the Angel, Islington. Like any 'provincial', I had a Monopoly-fuelled semantic frisson hearing those names. Well, seeing the book shortly afterwards I thought, what an excellent idea; a mini-travelogue, illuminating the story of London by visiting the 'real' streets of the Monopoly board. Unfortunately I soon realised the connection between the cardboard London and the real London was actually a bit tenuous, and the selection of street names by the 30s designer were somewhat whimsical anyway. This wouldn't have mattered if Moore had done a lot of prior research and/or had some thrilling escapades in his journey into the urban jungle. Unfortunately he did neither and I had the distinct impression that frankly the author really couldn't be bothered. There was some mildly interesting stuff on the pre-war city and guidebook-lite potted histories of each area, but scant attempt to tie it all together or even to tell a meaningful story. I became quite exasperated at the shallow indolence of the entire project, so the book was left half-read around the house, which aggravated me mightily until I forced myself to finish it. Inspired me in a negative way to do the tour myself, though, and perhaps even to play a bit more of that wonderful game.
Love it October 6, 2008 I love trhis book, I must have read it four or five times, it is an interesting and light hearted ramble around London. Perfect for a holiday book or for a long flight. I have become a big fan of Tim Moore and particulary recommend Spanish steps.
Plodding September 11, 2008 Readable, if very superficial, and eventually the humour grates (like Bill Bryson). But it does make you interested in parts of London, the architecture, the history - and I went away and looked things up on Wikipedia - the Euston Arch, for instance. I found 'French Revolutions' much less of a chore, more engaging.
great read March 13, 2008 i love Moore books, the quite dry, well written witty humour keeps you entertained and he keeps throwing in facts and stories about mighty London.
loved the chapter on the old sewage works! a must read
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