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The Museum of Things We Lost
Par :Formats :
Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
- Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235880825
- EAN9798235880825
- Date de parution05/05/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
A warm, funny, deeply nostalgic journey through the everyday things that quietly disappeared from our lives. There was a time when phone boxes stood on street corners, video shops glowed on Friday nights, paper maps filled the passenger seat, toy catalogues were circled before Christmas, school discos turned plain halls into kingdoms of panic and hope, and photographs had to be collected before anyone knew what they had captured.
The Museum of Things We Lost opens the doors to a vanished world of ordinary objects, small rituals, family habits, public places, and childhood memories. From VHS tapes and library stamps to birthday cards, cassette cases, high street shops, handwritten notes, loose change, printed TV guides, and the strange courage of making a call in public, this book gathers the details that once shaped everyday life.
Inside, readers will rediscover:. Phone boxes, payphones, remembered numbers, and calls made with coins in hand. Video shops, late fees, horror shelves, family arguments, and Saturday night choices. Paper maps, wrong turns, glove compartments, petrol station directions, and the old art of getting lost. Toy catalogues, folded corners, Christmas wishing, and the ache of childhood wanting. School discos, slow dances, fizzy drinks, glitter, nerves, and public embarrassment.
High streets, newsagents, record shops, photo counters, sweet shops, and places that knew your family. TV guides, handwritten cards, developed photographs, library books, cash tills, mixtapes, street games, and the objects now slipping from viewThis is a book for anyone who remembers the weight of coins in a pocket, the smell of a video shop, the sound of a library stamp, the thrill of circling toys in a catalogue, or the nervous magic of standing at the edge of a dance floor while a song changed the whole room.
The Museum of Things We Lost is a love letter to the ordinary things that carried our lives before we realised they were becoming history.
The Museum of Things We Lost opens the doors to a vanished world of ordinary objects, small rituals, family habits, public places, and childhood memories. From VHS tapes and library stamps to birthday cards, cassette cases, high street shops, handwritten notes, loose change, printed TV guides, and the strange courage of making a call in public, this book gathers the details that once shaped everyday life.
Inside, readers will rediscover:. Phone boxes, payphones, remembered numbers, and calls made with coins in hand. Video shops, late fees, horror shelves, family arguments, and Saturday night choices. Paper maps, wrong turns, glove compartments, petrol station directions, and the old art of getting lost. Toy catalogues, folded corners, Christmas wishing, and the ache of childhood wanting. School discos, slow dances, fizzy drinks, glitter, nerves, and public embarrassment.
High streets, newsagents, record shops, photo counters, sweet shops, and places that knew your family. TV guides, handwritten cards, developed photographs, library books, cash tills, mixtapes, street games, and the objects now slipping from viewThis is a book for anyone who remembers the weight of coins in a pocket, the smell of a video shop, the sound of a library stamp, the thrill of circling toys in a catalogue, or the nervous magic of standing at the edge of a dance floor while a song changed the whole room.
The Museum of Things We Lost is a love letter to the ordinary things that carried our lives before we realised they were becoming history.



