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OverviewBRIXTON BOOTS by Nick Razer Brixton, 1968. Before the hate. Before the headlines. Before the streets caught fire. There were the boots. Fourteen-year-old Dezi Morgan has learned that how you dress is more than fashion - it's armor. In a cramped council flat off Coldharbour Lane, he polishes his oxblood Doc Martens until they shine like blood in sunlight. His older brother Sol teaches him the ritual: the crease must be sharp, the braces straight, the collar perfect. Because in Brixton, looking sharp isn't vanity - it's survival. The Morgan brothers are part of the first generation of Black skinheads - sons of Jamaican immigrants who built their identity around ska, rocksteady, and working-class pride. With their crew - Tennyson, Mikey Two-Chicken, and Garnett - they move through Electric Avenue and Atlantic Road like kings of a small but hard-won kingdom. The music of Prince Buster and Desmond Dekker pours from every record shop and sound system, binding Black and white youths together in dance halls thick with bass and cigarette smoke. But Brixton is changing. As the National Front spreads its message of hate through South London, the streets that once pulsed with unity begin to fracture. Rumors of attacks follow the boys wherever they go. Swastikas appear on brick walls. Young men in boots and braces - once brothers in music - now wear fascist badges. Still, the dance goes on. When Duke Reid's legendary sound system comes to Railton Road, the entire neighborhood turns out. Inside a warehouse trembling with bass, Dezi experiences the pure, electric joy of belonging - dancing shoulder to shoulder with his crew, locking eyes with a girl named Pearl, watching Sol command the floor like a king. In that moment, Brixton feels unstoppable. Untouchable. But joy is fragile. As tensions rise and violence edges closer, Dezi must decide what it truly means to be a skinhead - and what it means to protect your family, your culture, and your home. Is pride enough? Is music enough? Or will the boots that once symbolized unity become weapons in a battle for the soul of the streets? Brixton Boots is a raw, immersive coming-of-age novel steeped in the sounds, style, and street culture of late-1960s London. Nick Razer delivers an unflinching portrait of youth, identity, brotherhood, and resistance at the birth of a movement - before it was rewritten, before it was divided, before it was claimed by hate. For fans of authentic street fiction, historical urban drama, and music-driven coming-of-age stories, Brixton Boots is a powerful reminder that culture is born in small rooms, built on friendship, and defended in the streets. Because sometimes the sharpest weapon isn't a fist. It's a pair of polished boots. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Nick RazerPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.358kg ISBN: 9798248296668Pages: 264 Publication Date: 13 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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