- Published: 15 February 2017
- ISBN: 9780099584445
- Imprint: Vintage
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 432
- RRP: $29.99
Jumpin' Jack Flash
David Litvinoff and the Rock’n’Roll Underworld
- Published: 15 February 2017
- ISBN: 9780099584445
- Imprint: Vintage
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 432
- RRP: $29.99
Keiron Pim's Jumping Jack Flash is an outstanding study of a remarkable, but until now wholly elusive figure. Meticulously researched and elegantly written, Pim's work is the first to bring us the story of David Litvinoff, that real-life Zelig of post-war British bohemia. And via the magnesium flare of his subject's story, Pim illumines the multifaceted world through which he moved: East End gangsters, Chelsea aristos, Soho artists and Notting Hill hippies. Litvinoff, for so long the missing piece of so many cultural jigsaws, finally gets a story of his own and it's even more bizarre than one might have hoped. This will be an indispensable read for anyone who appreciates that mad, alluring, myth-filled world.
Jonathon Green, author of 'Days in the Life: Voices from the English Underground'
The rock'n'roll legend of David Litvinoff is given its definitive account. A considerable work of detection and human sympathy unpicking old myths and making them new.
Iain Sinclair
Keiron Pim’s Jumping Jack Flash is a kaleidoscopic ride through the acid-fields of Fities and Sixties London in search of David Litvinoff, a brilliant, desolate, unforgettable yet hard-to-focus gay Jewish grifter. Ironic stereotype and rebel at once, Litvinoff chars the car-crash societies he moves through. Mick Jagger, Lucian Freud and the Kray twins flash past in the throng, all sustained by drugs, sex, art, film and a great deal of rock'n’roll. Litvinoff is dazzling. Pim’s pilgrimage is appropriately and meticulously dazzled.
George Szirtes
A captivating and prodigiously well-researched account of that legendary 1960s London sub-world where criminality and bohemianism met head-on.
D. J. Taylor
Intricate, engrossing book.
Anthony Quinn, Mail on Sunday
Revelatory... The impressive list of character references in this extraordinary book gives some indication of just how singular a creature [David Litvinoff] was, and the mind-boggling diversity of the worlds in which he moved.
Mick Brown, Daily Telegraph
Pim is a skilful and erudite writer.
Clive Davis, The Times
Keiron Pim has grafted long and hard to separate the facts from the heady fictions… Pim does a great job of bringing the era and some of its most colourful characters to life.
Chris Maume, Independent
Litvinoff was a shape-shifter whose story...offers a window into a secret side of the 60s.
Jon Savage, Guardian
A tour-de-force of biography, a beautifully written account of a compelling but often repulsive man. It’s hard to imagine anyone getting closer to the truth than Keiron.
Eastern Daily Press
Pim has set out to write the definitive biography of a man who was the very definition of an unreliable narrator… Fascinating.
Andrew Anthony, Observer
This surely has the most startling beginning of any biography to be published this year… Vivid, engrossing… Pim gives an all too graphic picture of the seedy 1950s… He is compassionate and humane at every moment. His prose is always careful and stylish.
Richard Davenport-Hines, Guardian
Keiron Pim has done a marvellous job of bringing to light a character so outlandish that he reads like a fictional conflation of every colourful star from that swinging decade… Pim tells his story - piecing together the fragments to build a myth - quite brilliantly.
Paul Lester, Jewish Chronicle
Pim has written not just an engrossing account of a character who flitted easily between the underground and underworld of Swinging London, but also one of the best books I’ve ever read about the period… A compelling portrait of the dark side of the Sixties.
Choice Magazine
Assembled with skill and serious legwork... Jumpin' Jack Flash brings a familiar period of cultural history into sharp new relief.
Financial Times
Pim proves an intelligent…guide to this protean world, mixing a Quest for Corvo model with Iain Sinclair’s psycho-geography.
Andrew Lycett, Spectator
Blending pop culture, social history and interviews with raddled survivors, Pim reconstructs every scene in Litvinoff’s twisted history… Jumpin’ Jack Flash provides the missing piece of Swinging London’s social jigsaw.
Dominic Green, Literary Review
Fascinating biography… Pim has a thorough knowledge of his subject and his milieu and is painstaking in his research… Against the odds, Keiron Pim has written a very good book about a very bad man.
David Collard, Times Literary Supplement
A darkly humorous biography.
Ian Thomson, Tablet
Pim’s account of this extraordinary character is a magisterial work of scholarship.
Colin MacCabe, New Statesman
Pim’s remarkable book pulls from the shadows the story of a man who did his best to leave no trace.
Will Hodkinson, The Times, Book of the Year
You’ll worry at your hunger to keep on reading, but you won’t be able to stop.
Guardian, Book of the Year
Vibrant, colourful, revealing, often violent and one of the most absorbing biographies in a long time.
Alastair Mabbott, The Herald
This book is written extremely well, descriptively astute throughout, with a few pictures to help the reader better understand the narrative. The author has achieved a remarkable book, which others have tried to write in the past and failed. It is an altogether fascinating treatise on a little remembered man, who’s star burned bright, mainly in the 1960s, but carried resonance wherever and whenever he went.
Reg Seward, Nudge