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Peckham Rye
Pub Date
Sep 28 2025
| Archive Date
Nov 12 2025
Description
Joseph Wright, a young, alcoholic, mixed-race man, lives alone in a Peckham council flat earning a living by solving tough problems for people in his community. A chance phone call leads him on a tense trail from the poverty of London housing estates to gold mines in Ghana, and from the sinister underbelly of London’s global service sector to the gaudy riches of Mayfair.
As Joseph struggles to make sense of his own story, he takes the reader on a dangerous journey of discovery towards a truth that should be as unpalatable as it is unacceptable for those who still want to believe in democracy. In doing so he finds both the personal and institutional reasons for the gaping inequality in economic outcomes we see today and has to confront powerful forces, which, over hundreds of years, have captured much of the world’s history for their own ends.
Joseph Wright, a young, alcoholic, mixed-race man, lives alone in a Peckham council flat earning a living by solving tough problems for people in his community. A chance phone call leads him on a...
Description
Joseph Wright, a young, alcoholic, mixed-race man, lives alone in a Peckham council flat earning a living by solving tough problems for people in his community. A chance phone call leads him on a tense trail from the poverty of London housing estates to gold mines in Ghana, and from the sinister underbelly of London’s global service sector to the gaudy riches of Mayfair.
As Joseph struggles to make sense of his own story, he takes the reader on a dangerous journey of discovery towards a truth that should be as unpalatable as it is unacceptable for those who still want to believe in democracy. In doing so he finds both the personal and institutional reasons for the gaping inequality in economic outcomes we see today and has to confront powerful forces, which, over hundreds of years, have captured much of the world’s history for their own ends.
A Note From the Publisher
Miles Prince is the pseudonym of a black author who grew up in and around London’s council estates in the seventies and eighties. Having had a successful career in the global financial industry he has long wondered who it serves, at what cost to society and started to examine its history many years ago in order to address these questions. Over the last decade, he has become particularly interested in both childhood and intergenerational trauma.
Miles Prince is the pseudonym of a black author who grew up in and around London’s council estates in the seventies and eighties. Having had a successful career in the global financial industry he...
A Note From the Publisher
Miles Prince is the pseudonym of a black author who grew up in and around London’s council estates in the seventies and eighties. Having had a successful career in the global financial industry he has long wondered who it serves, at what cost to society and started to examine its history many years ago in order to address these questions. Over the last decade, he has become particularly interested in both childhood and intergenerational trauma.
Available Editions
| EDITION |
Ebook |
| ISBN |
9781836288893 |
| PRICE |
£4.99 (GBP)
|
| PAGES |
264
|
Available on NetGalley
NetGalley Reader
(EPUB)
NetGalley Shelf App
(EPUB)
Send to Kindle (EPUB)
Send to Kobo (EPUB)
Download (EPUB)
Additional Information
Available Editions
| EDITION |
Ebook |
| ISBN |
9781836288893 |
| PRICE |
£4.99 (GBP)
|
| PAGES |
264
|
Available on NetGalley
NetGalley Reader
(EPUB)
NetGalley Shelf App
(EPUB)
Send to Kindle (EPUB)
Send to Kobo (EPUB)
Download (EPUB)
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