Don Mc Cullin`s view of England is rooted in his wartime childhood & growing up around Finsbury Park in the fifties. His first published photograph was a picture of a gang from his neighbourhood, which appeared in a newspaper after a local murder; Mc Cullin always balanced his anger at the unacceptable face of the nation with tenderness or compassion.” In England” combines some of his greatest work with an entirely new body of photographs. Mc Cullin sees his home country with its perpetual social gulf between the affluent & the desperate in mind. He continues in the same black & white tradition as he did between foreign assignments for the ” Sunday Times” in the sixties & seventies, when his view of a deprived Britain seemed as dark as the conflict zones from which he`d just escaped. This book marks his return to the cities & landscape he knew as a young photographer. At a time when we might believe the world has changed beyond our imagination, Mc Cullin shows us a view of England where the line between the wealthy & the deprived is as defined as ever. This time he adds wry humour to his lyricism, as if the nation is as absurd as it is tragic.