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Bohemian London
Bohemian London: From Thomas De Quincey to Jeffrey Bernard | Travis Elborough
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For more than 150 years, the garrets and pubs of Soho, the salons of Chelsea, the opium dens of Limehouse, and the brothels of Covent Garden teemed with poets, painters, derelicts, drunks, sensualists, homosexuals, crooks, and cranks. In Bohemian London, Travis Elborough chronicles de Qunincey and Coleridge’s hazy laudanum days in Tyburnia; toasts Wilde at the Café Royal; imbibes absinthe with Yeats at the Cheshire Cheese; snorts cocaine with Aleister Crowley; sips bitter with Dylan Thomas; and catches last orders with Francis Bacon. While true Bohemians may be long gone, their style, mores, addictions, and excesses did much to shape the city we know today.
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A book about the lesser known corner of Bohemian lifestyle based around Soho and Chelsea in London, home for hundreds of years to writers, painters and poets, radicals both home grown and from the continent copying the actions of better known communities in Paris whilst trying to creat something individual and unique. A wild dangerous place of alcohol, drugs and betrayal which I would have liked to visit but not necessarily live there.